Lol, uh, no. Don't want cerwin vegas. And when I say loud, it's not really that loud probably. I might play one or two songs with peak db's around the 95 db range, i'm not talking 110 db or anything, but even when in the 80-95db average range, the bass can border what I think is close to damaging my little 6.5" drivers. That's actually the reason why I traded studio 60's awhile back to a "lesser" studio 20; 5" vs. 6.5".
Anyhoo, what I can't figure out is why the crunchy sound went away today after about 2 minutes. When I first heard it today I switched my speaker cable on my smp right away to make sure it was in fact the speaker and not something else, and it was the speaker. I played a song at low volumes, leaned into the volume on the second song, didn't really hear the cruchy sound, then I disconnected and disassembled my speaker (just to see if when moving the speeaker in and out if I could feel a damaged voicecoil, which I didn't) then I reassembled the speaker and never heard the noise again, even at moderately loud volumes listenjng to music with a driving bass line.
I'm interested to see if said crunchiness returns at the intial warm up my next listening session.
Anyhoo, what I can't figure out is why the crunchy sound went away today after about 2 minutes. When I first heard it today I switched my speaker cable on my smp right away to make sure it was in fact the speaker and not something else, and it was the speaker. I played a song at low volumes, leaned into the volume on the second song, didn't really hear the cruchy sound, then I disconnected and disassembled my speaker (just to see if when moving the speeaker in and out if I could feel a damaged voicecoil, which I didn't) then I reassembled the speaker and never heard the noise again, even at moderately loud volumes listenjng to music with a driving bass line.
I'm interested to see if said crunchiness returns at the intial warm up my next listening session.