User guide
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OUTPUT SETUP
Next, the MS-8 will display Xover Setup. During Xover Setup, you must tell
the MS-8 which speakers are connected to the system, and you must select
the crossover characteristics for all of the system’s speakers. Referring to the
Conguration Chart that you lled out when you connected the MS-8 will make
this process easy. During Xover Setup and Channel Selection, you must enter the
information according to the specic sequence that the MS-8’s display presents.
A note about crossovers
In general, your car stereo’s small speakers are designed to reproduce high frequencies,
while its large speakers are designed to reproduce low frequencies. Larger speakers do a
poor job of reproducing high frequencies, and smaller speakers are not able to reproduce
low frequencies and may even be damaged by them.
A crossover is a lter or combination of lters that limit the sounds that are sent to a
particular speaker so that it receives only the frequencies that it can safely reproduce.
The MS-8 features a sophisticated crossover system that you can set to get the best
performance from whatever type of speaker system is installed in your vehicle.
In the MS-8, a crossover (or lter, abbreviated “Xover” on the MS-8 display) frequency
refers to the frequency at which the sounds sent to that speaker will begin to be
attenuated. The crossover lter slope refers to the rate at which the sounds will be
attenuated. The MS-8’s crossover contains two types of lters:
• High-pass lters, which send the frequencies above the crossover frequency to a
speaker while attenuating the frequencies below the crossover frequency. This type of
lter is used to prevent lower frequencies from reaching smaller speakers.
• Low-pass lters, which send the frequencies below the crossover frequency to a speaker
while attenuating the frequencies above the crossover frequency. This type of lter is
used to prevent higher frequencies from reaching larger speakers.
A high-pass lter can be combined with a low-pass lter to create a third type of lter,
called a band-pass lter. A band-pass lter sends the band of frequencies between
the high-pass and low-pass crossover frequencies to a speaker while attenuating the
frequencies below the high-pass crossover frequency and above the low-pass crossover
frequency. This type of lter is used to prevent lower and higher frequencies from reaching
midrange speakers in three-way speaker systems.
The most important thing that determines your selection of an MS-8 crossover
lter’sfrequencyandslopeismakingsurethatyoursystem’ssmallspeakers
don'treceivetoomuchbass,whichcancausethesoundtheyreproducetobe
distorted and can even damage them.
For example, an 80Hz high-pass lter will remove frequencies below 80Hz from the signal
that the MS-8 sends to a smaller speaker. However, it may not completely remove those
frequencies; a 6dB per octave lter slope will still allow the speaker to receive 1/4 of the
signal’s power at 40Hz, while a 24dB/octave lter slope will allow the speaker to receive
almost no power at 40Hz and will keep the speaker from receiving too much bass. We
recommend using 24dB/octave slopes between subwoofers and midrange
speakers and between midrange speakers and tweeters.
CALIBRATION/SETUP
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