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Meyer UPM response anamoly
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<blockquote data-quote="Bennett Prescott" data-source="post: 49188" data-attributes="member: 4"><p>Re: Meyer UPM response anamoly</p><p></p><p>Riley, I bet if you measured off axis you'd find it had a funny hole at a different frequency. When a loudspeaker is designed with processing in mind, certain advantages can be had that may cause response aberrations, which is no problem if you know those can be fixed. There are some boxes that sound OK when run with their raw drivers, since they were designed with the knowledge that most users would have nothing more than a fixed slope crossover. These are not they!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bennett Prescott, post: 49188, member: 4"] Re: Meyer UPM response anamoly Riley, I bet if you measured off axis you'd find it had a funny hole at a different frequency. When a loudspeaker is designed with processing in mind, certain advantages can be had that may cause response aberrations, which is no problem if you know those can be fixed. There are some boxes that sound OK when run with their raw drivers, since they were designed with the knowledge that most users would have nothing more than a fixed slope crossover. These are not they! [/QUOTE]
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