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clipping? Volume knob placement does NOT indicate much. Some receivers reach full output well before 12:00 on the dial. Use of the loudness button, bass boost and treble boost can all drive the receiver and then the speaker into distortion at fairly low levels.
∙Many of today’s recordings including DVDs and CDs contain extremely powerful low bass. This low bass can easily drive woofers into
∙Our systems are designed for accurate sound. Our rate of damage or failure is extremely low. We could make the systems even more rugged if we were to compromise sound quality. Moving the crossover points upward would protect midrange and tweeters better while causing a loss of detail, clarity and imaging. The cabinets and woofers could be designed to
You can protect your speakers by following a couple of very simple guidelines:
∙If it sounds distorted, turn it down. Distortion is a warning sign that should not be ignored.
∙Don’t use tone controls or equalizers if possible. IF you must use them, monitor the system carefully.
∙Beware the party damage epidemic. Speakers are more often damaged during parties. All those bodies soak up sound, requiring more output to sound as loud, bass and treble controls are sometimes cranked up and nobody is listening for distortion.
∙Watch out for energy put out by the amplifier in the range below 20Hz which is not music. Examples include record warps, DC current and subsonic noise in the recording. These signals can take up a lot of amplifier power which means the amplifier runs out of steam very early. These signals can also overload a speaker even though you can’t hear them. If you have ever watched a cone “flap” you know just what we mean.
∙Vented speakers are particularly sensitive to signals below their F3 point. The average vented box that can handle 100 watts at 50Hz may handle less than
∙Keep an eye out for excessive cone movement that is not producing music. Find the source of the problem and eliminate it, play at low levels, or use a subsonic filter (usually in your
In over thirty years of daily evaluation of all types of speakers on everything from 10 to 1000 watts with all kinds of music, we have never damaged a driver without first hearing audible distortion. If it sounds bad, turn it down and you will never damage a speaker. Refer to the
Hookup
Your Sapphire XLs are furnished with
Make sure you hookup the speakers in the correct polarity. The red (positive) terminal on your amp should hook up to the red binding post, and the black terminal should be connected to the black binding post. Keep this the same for both speakers in a stereo pair. A way to check the correct polarity is to play music with a lot of bass. The correct hookup will yield the greatest amount of bass.