If a 5.1 system has identical speakers all around with 15 inch woofers and all of the speakers are set to "large" on the processor, does the serious bass get evenly distributed to all speakers? Say, like an explosion or a dinosaur stomping?My internet is giving problems, so if I don't post, that's the reason. With Dolby Digital, I would think that if you have the processor set to large for all five, only that one channel should get that bass, if they mixed it this way. More channels will, if they mixed it to do that. IOW, if an explosion goes off in the left rear, it should give all the bass if, it was mixed/made to do so, is my understanding. The channels are supposed to be totally isolated from each other. With the sub on, it will probably get bass from that one channel explosion, if they intended it to do so, during the making/mixing of the movie. Dolby Pro-Logic could not do a lot of this, like true separate channels, and it had limited frequency response to the mono rears.
How Is Bass Divided Among Speakers If No Sub?
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How is the bass divided among speakers if there is no sub in the home theater system?
If a 5.1 system has identical speakers all around with 15 inch woofers and all of the speakers are set to "large" on the processor, does the serious bass get evenly distributed to all speakers? Say, like an explosion or a dinosaur stomping?
Is there much serious bass info sent to the surround speakers if they are set to "large"?
How is the bass divided among speakers if there is no sub in the home theater system?
If a 5.1 system has identical speakers all around with 15 inch woofers and all of the speakers are set to "large" on the processor, does the serious bass get evenly distributed to all speakers? Say, like an explosion or a dinosaur stomping?
Is there much serious bass info sent to the surround speakers if they are set to "large"?
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- 10 posts total
- 10 posts total