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| quote: | Originally posted by Spuds6s
dont i need some kind of mono output then?
The way im doing it now:
The sub feeds off of the output of the left or right speaker as my mixer doesnt have any mono output.
No matter which way I do it with this mixer, im only getting the one side of the music. I dont think anyone notices, but i know its there.
eh...and explain to me this crossover business, i have no idea how that works, people keep saying it, and i understand vaguely the principles behind it, but i never have the idea to read up on it |
By reading that I assume your sub only has 1 single input, right?... so in that case you could feed your speakers/monitors your mixer's main output, and use your mixer's secondary main output Left to feed a mono line to your sub. Then, when you adjust the main output on your mixer, the monitors are affected and you have independent subwoofer control via your secondary main adjust.
A crossover is a unit the manages frequency ranges. You'd have to get a simpler and cheaper one if it's for home use, because the pro-units are far too costly to need one in a home setup. THe crossover would be fed ALL of your signal from your mixer's main output. The crossover would then feed outputs to your monitors and sub individually. It also allows you to select the range of bass frequencies to send to the sub, and the range to send to your monitors. Basically, it's like strapping an EQ in the line before each speaker, to make it simply understood.
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