Actually, there is some room for confusion here.
I have actually seen crossovers called 24 dB slope when they were actually just second order. Some people actually include the slopes of both drivers. So two drivers each having 12 dB slopes gets called a 24 dB crossover.
Normally, it doesn't work that way, but you do run into that terminology sometimes.
I have actually seen crossovers called 24 dB slope when they were actually just second order. Some people actually include the slopes of both drivers. So two drivers each having 12 dB slopes gets called a 24 dB crossover.
Normally, it doesn't work that way, but you do run into that terminology sometimes.
kelticwizard said:Some people actually include the slopes of both drivers. So two drivers each having 12 dB slopes gets called a 24 dB crossover.
Sounds like some people need a slap upside da head.
Haven't heard that transmogrification before.
speaker
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