so whats the story with LFE?
i finally got my subs hooked up last night. and plugged in a new movie but im not getting what i thought i would get from the lfe source on my h/k. each of my subs is an 8" that i have tuned the cabinets to about 40hz, with about 200 watts going into each one. with the sub adjustment turned up on my h/k to about 6 i still only get just a slight rumble not the bone crusher i was expecting. any thoughts?
How are you hooking them up?
Quote:
Originally Posted by BEETLEMAN
i finally got my subs hooked up last night. and plugged in a new movie but im not getting what i thought i would get from the lfe source on my h/k. each of my subs is an 8" that i have tuned the cabinets to about 40hz, with about 200 watts going into each one. with the sub adjustment turned up on my h/k to about 6 i still only get just a slight rumble not the bone crusher i was expecting. any thoughts?
If your using a splitter then each sub will only see half the signal strength. You should be able to compensate using the receivers adjustments.
LFE is very specific to the movie. Some don't have any LFE at all! Others like Star Wars, or Jurassic Park, can give your sub a real workout.
So your telling me that I'm getting twice the gain?
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Originally Posted by kexodusc
Not exactly, voltage remains constant througout a parallel circuit, so when you use a splitter, there is no loss in signal strength to each sub. Most of those tiny signal amps have more than enough miliamperes to split an LFE cable several times before the resistive load is too much. Cool experiment to perform if you've got a multimeter and way too much free time on your hands.
I'm guessing there's a difference in output voltage between DVD and CD player in this case...a very common, and annoying occurance :mad:
When I run a splitter in my velodynes? I just don't seem to get that effect from doing it.