Sure helped me!!!! I have a 2019 impala and the door from your truck is exactly like my Impala. I just hope I have enough space to Mount the tweeter like you did... Thanks A lot !!!!
My windows are always all the way down. If it did hit the box, I haven’t noticed. Doing a 4 channel amp at some point and might pull the panels again. I’ve added two 8” 800 watt rms subs since this video. Been meaning to do a video on them but haven’t got around to it.
@@FinalBossGarage Good. It's a good idea to put the window all the way down before pulling the door panel off. Then it'll be easy to see where it's going to hit. The crossover looked right in line with where the window ends up.
That is a terrible spot for the crossover. It is inside the vapor barrier of the door, so it is exposed moisture. It is also directly in the back wave of the woofer. If you want to really make it sound good and last I would recommend that you move the crossover outside the vapor barrier behind the door panel, install some sound deadening material around and behind the speaker, and add some fast rings to the woofers. Those little changes can make a huge difference in the quality of the sound, likely more than the component set itself made.
i’ve been looking at these exact same speakers, hoping they go on Black Friday sale as well rn. Now that you have had some time with them how would you rate the experience with these speakers?
not sure if you still need this information. Crossovers can affect the performance of midrange speakers' bass to some extent, depending on their design and settings within the audio system. Crossovers are electronic circuits used to split the audio signal into different frequency bands and send those bands to the appropriate drivers (such as tweeters, midrange speakers, and woofers) in a speaker system. For midrange speakers, the crossover point determines the range of frequencies they handle. If the crossover point for the midrange speakers is set too low or too high, it can affect the bass response. For instance, If the crossover sends too much low-frequency content to the midrange speaker, it may attempt to reproduce bass frequencies it's not designed for. This can result in distortion, muddiness, or even damage to the midrange driver if pushed too hard. In other cases, if the crossover sends too few bass frequencies to the midrange speaker, it might lose some lower midrange presence, impacting the overall richness and fullness of the sound. In general, JBL has an astonding reputation for producing reliable and high-quality audio equipment, including crossovers. Considering their reputation, jbl should be a safe company to buy crossovers from. However nothing beats research into specific products ! Hope this helps my friend.
Actually about to do them in a few weeks. I'll be doing them with a 4 channel amp. I'm about to drop a video of my new subwoofers after I get some time to film.
@@FinalBossGarage Were u running an amp for those separates or stock radio power? Also after hearing them with music do u think it’s a big improvement. I’m about to dig into mine
@@FinalBossGarage do the new speakers still sound good en=ven tho you don't have a new amp. I wanna upgrade my factory Bose system but didn't want to spend the money on a new amp but I may need to gain full sound quality for the 90 watt speakers