Well yeah, looking at it from a perspective of separating mids and highs into one signal source and mid bass into another is something that I've always wished was possible. The dude at car audio fabrications explained it nicely. As soon as he said ditch the passive crossover that comes in the box with the components it clicked. I was thinking that either way when you set up a component system the signal from both leaves the amp on one channel and goes to the crossover so it's same as having a coaxial.
So now I have a question about how DSP is set to work.
Let's use 5 khz for example. Say the source signal is at 2 decibels when it gets to the DSP. Say that you edit the volume down to 1 decibel. It's supposed to leave the DSP at 1 decibel right?.
Here's the question. Say a different song starts playing and the 5khz signal gets to the DSP at 5 decibels. Will the DSP
1. Cut the 5db down to 1db?
2. Cut 1db and send out 4db?
So what I'm thinking now since I have the amps is to bridge one to two channels for either the mid bass or the rear speakers and use 4 channels on the other. That'll create 6 line level frequencies that can be edited at the DSP right? I'm looking at switching the front coaxials and tweeter for a 2 speaker component system, leaving the rear coaxials, and ditching the tweeters. Is that what I should need looking at?
Lewis King.