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Astra Sound System Setup.
I have a 2002 astra which has a mid range and tweeter in all four of the
doors. Next year I'm planning to buy an MP3 player the equivalent to the Alpine 9815 (only reason I have not bought one of these already is because I heard there is still a delay beween mp3 tracks, hoping this will not be the case in next years model). Anyway I don't want to modify the car too much so was wondering how easy it would be to keep the original speakers but cut out the low frequencys to them and add a sub or 2. I'm thinking if the original speakers are only fed with the frequencies they are designed for they will probably sound ok. Anybody got any commets on this, is it a good idea or not? Gav |
Astra Sound System Setup.
"Gav" wrote in message ... I have a 2002 astra which has a mid range and tweeter in all four of the doors. Next year I'm planning to buy an MP3 player the equivalent to the Alpine 9815 (only reason I have not bought one of these already is because I heard there is still a delay beween mp3 tracks, hoping this will not be the case in next years model). Anyway I don't want to modify the car too much so was wondering how easy it would be to keep the original speakers but cut out the low frequencys to them and add a sub or 2. I'm thinking if the original speakers are only fed with the frequencies they are designed for they will probably sound ok. Anybody got any commets on this, is it a good idea or not? Gav I've recently bought an Alpine 9815 and haven't noticed the track gaps being any longer than skipping from one track to another on a regular CD. Mind you, I tend to use random mostly, so I don't to from one track straight to the next. It's a great unit though, and if you wanted to cut the lows to your door speakers, it's got built-in crossovers to deal with that. tidyboyo |
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