The equalizer you don't know you have


Audiophiles are amazing at finding ways to not use an equalizer or tone control of any sort. Shame because in the bass regions EQ are magic. We can talk all day long about being able to hear the felt on the seat of the third violinist, but when you have a bass mode that is 20dB louder than anything else it can ruin your experience, and no power cable in the world is going to fix it.

But while our desire for audio purity is commendable for its tenacity, you may not be aware that EQ circuits are built right into a lot of speakers. A lot of very expensive speakers.

What do I mean? Well, very few very good sounding drivers are ideal, or integrate well with the other drivers. Speaker designers compensate for this within the crossover. Those caps, and coils which you think are just there to prevent a driver from going ballistic may also be coloring your sound, in a good way. Hopefully no one starts throwing their speakers out after this. :)


Best,

Erik
erik_squires
Hi @bryhifi

You aren't wrong, but Kenjit is notorous for making statements he can't back up or contradicting himself within the same sentence.

I for one would be personally grateful to those who let factless claims go ignored.

Thank you,

Erik

@erik_squires 

duly noted.  Sorry, it is your thread and having been here since 1999 I’ve seen enough of this that I should know better and bite my tongue.  
Peace out
EQ , hidden EQ starts with microphone choice.....
then microphone preamp, then the board, etc...

quiz time: how does an astute designer fix baffle step in the filter ?
Also many  of the more sloppy phono stages and cutting head amps have inaccurate inverse RIAA ( and other standards ) applied....

quiz time - anybody remember the Cello Palette?