bass problem in a sailboat


Hi!

I have a sailboat with a nice marine-grade stereo, built by Poly-Planar. There are four speakers, powered by a 4 X 45 (180 watts total) head unit. The speakers each have a 5 1/4" "woofer". I generally like the sound. The not-so-low bass is great, but I'd like to boost the really low frequencies just a little. I listen to mostly classical music, and I miss a few very low notes that I hear clearly on my home system. I'm NOT talking about great volume. I just want to boost the very low bass a little. I did this once years ago in a Camaro by simply adding an equalizer to the factory system. I DON'T want to add an amplifier and subwoofer because I don't need the extra magnetic field nor the additional power drain. An equalizer also seems inappropriate because, in this case, it would be a "set it and forget it" thing that I would hide somewhere. Is there a simple way to boost just the very low notes a little with the existing speakers and head unit?

Regards,
Troy Scott
tscott1217d0eb
If you remount the speakers (tightly, waterproof, sealed well) in the bottom (hull?) of the boat so that the water itself acts as a cushion, this will provide just what you want. Not many people have the opportunity you have to use huge quantities of water as a suspension medium. Hemingway did this in the 40's
I'm still working on the problem of getting better bass from the system. As I said, I have a four channel head unit with four times 45 watts, 180 watts total. I'm currently using four 6" by 6" by 9" box speakers with it. The sound is generally good with the exception of very low bass notes. I'm missing really low notes that I hear on the home system. So far I've bought three things. I've bought a Sony woofer. I also bought a device which I thought would enable me to combine the bass from two channels of my head unit to run the one woofer. Fortunately a consultant from Crutchfield explained to me that receiver/"head units" aren't "bridgeable" and that the device is incompatible. He also showed me ( and sold me) a Profile HA700M, which is designed to combine two channels safely, amplify the signal some more, and run a woofer. However, I'm trying to keep this simple. I'm now thinking that I don't need ANY of what I've bought so far! I came across some dual voice coil subwoofers in Crutchfield's online catalog. I'm now thinking that I could simplify this whole installation and probably end up with better sound. I think I should eliminate two of the four full range box speakers. That would free up two 45 watt channels which could then run one dual voice coil subwoofer. The whole system would then consist of:
One head unit with four times 45 watts,
Two full range speakers, and
One dual voice coil woofer with two 70 hz low pass filters.

Thoughts, please?
With an open boat, the bass will simply dissipate into "thin air". Cars are enclosed and very small which enables the bass to resonate like mad.

First thing may be to find a spectrum analyzer to see what frequencies are missing. It may be quite surprising...

You may want to consider something like a "bass shaker". These little devices can be mounted either on you seat or in a boat, on the floor. You will need some sort of sub crossover which will send all of the signals below 60-80 to the bass shakers. Check out partsexpress.com for sub amps/crossovers. You may be able to run 2 of your channels to the amp/crossover and then to the speakers. The amp will divide the signal, amplify it, and send the bass to the shakers.
Hello again,
I't's been suggested to me that my idea of running a dual voice coil woofer directly from two (at 45 watts each) of my four channels wouldn't be satisfactory. I still think it might work, especially since I'm only after the missing low pitches, NOT great volumn. Thoughts, please?

Regards,
Troy
WRT "bass shakers", I do remember from long ago a device that could be attached to a wall to transform the wall into a speaker. I'm guessing that's what the "bass shaker" is. I'll check into it.

BTW, the sailboat in question is a Cape Dory 36. The displacement is over 16,000 pounds, and there are two nice cabins which are probably acoustically similar to a small room.

Regards,
Troy