Every speaker system needs a crossover of some type. In an active sound system each driver (tweeter, woofer, sub) has its own channel of amplification.
Yes you'll need a tweeter, the high frequencies won't be loud enough for it to sound good. are the coaxials? because a midrange speaker will not hit 20KHz without a tweeter.May 22, 2005
Why Do You Need A Crossover? Every audio system, including the one in your car, needs a crossover to direct sound to the correct driver. Tweeters, woofers and subs should get high, mid and low frequencies respectively. Every full-range speaker has a crossover network inside.
Tweeters allow you to pick up the highs that get drowned out/highly distorted out by all that bass. If you have none, and a system that powerful, it would be a good idea to get a set.
To connect your tweeters in series, ensure the negative terminal of the first one is connected to your amp's negative, the first speaker's positive is connected to the second one's negative, the third tweeter's negative to the fourth one's positive, and so on, ensuring that the positive terminal of the last speaker is
Premium Member. Long Answer: If you're just hooking them up and putting them in the mounting holes then there are too many. It's going to make it sound worse than w/ 2.
You can wire a 4 channel amp to 6 speakers in many ways. When you wire more speakers with an amp than the capacity, it increases load. An increase in load makes your amp hot that is not good for your amplifier. You can connect 6 speakers to 4 channel amp either in series or parallel.
As tweeters produce high-frequency sounds, in cars they're used as part of a speaker system in cars but not alone. A better-sounding car audio system will use a woofer speaker, one or more passive crossovers, and a separate tweeter.
EDIT: If you are running the woofers straight and the tweeters with only a cap, the same thing applies as the rising impedance of the woofer puts it high enough so as not to affect the overall impedance when you add the tweeter with it's cap.
How Do Tweeters Work? Tweeters, like other types of electrical speakers, are driven by components called amplifiers. Amplifiers convert electrical signals from your car's computers into acoustical waveforms. The other speaker components then transform the waveforms into hearable sounds.
Assuming all speakers have equal efficiency. This is from 'The Car Stereo Cookbook. So if you are using 400 watts total per side, the author is suggesting you need 40 watts for the tweeters. If your tweeters were 3 db more sensitive, then you would need 20 watts.
A tweeter or treble speaker is a special type of loudspeaker (usually dome, inverse dome or horn-type) that is designed to produce high audio frequencies, typically deliver high frequencies up to 100 kHz.