MOSHO92
SHO Member
The physics of sound is a fairly fascinating subject, but one too large
to
cover here. Basically speaking, all sound travels in a sine wave. Sound
waves (and sine waves) look like big boobs, especially low frequency
sound.
Nice, curvy *******. The more volume that you ask for, the bigger the
tittie the amp has to produce. However, if you want too big of a
tittie,
and your amp can't give you anything more than a 36C, it still tries to
give you what you need. But instead, it produces a truncated tittie.
That
looks like a big tittie with the top cut off. Then your speaker is
like,
"What the **** kind of tittie is this?" And then it tries to deal with
it,
but speakers really freak out when you give them squared-off *******,
and
they start making strange noises, and damage themselves in the process.
This is called clipping.
Conversely, if your amp can really fill out a D cup, but your speakers
are
merely a C, a little extra isn't going to **** them. Looks damn good if
you
ask me.
shrug This is cute....but is it true. All you audio gurus can help me with this. If i were to get a kickass amp, could it sound better in the stock speaker setup. I cant get my music too loud right now or my speakers make weird noise. Is this "clipping" or can the stock paper speakers just not handle it?
to
cover here. Basically speaking, all sound travels in a sine wave. Sound
waves (and sine waves) look like big boobs, especially low frequency
sound.
Nice, curvy *******. The more volume that you ask for, the bigger the
tittie the amp has to produce. However, if you want too big of a
tittie,
and your amp can't give you anything more than a 36C, it still tries to
give you what you need. But instead, it produces a truncated tittie.
That
looks like a big tittie with the top cut off. Then your speaker is
like,
"What the **** kind of tittie is this?" And then it tries to deal with
it,
but speakers really freak out when you give them squared-off *******,
and
they start making strange noises, and damage themselves in the process.
This is called clipping.
Conversely, if your amp can really fill out a D cup, but your speakers
are
merely a C, a little extra isn't going to **** them. Looks damn good if
you
ask me.
shrug This is cute....but is it true. All you audio gurus can help me with this. If i were to get a kickass amp, could it sound better in the stock speaker setup. I cant get my music too loud right now or my speakers make weird noise. Is this "clipping" or can the stock paper speakers just not handle it?