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"Joseph Oberlander" wrote in
message ink.net... "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? If it properly decodes DD it will do this. It's a part of the Dolby/THX licensing and there are technical reasons why it's done. Some higher end preamps allow all sorts of interesting configurations but I'm leery of their practicality. In reality it's not that big a deal. Most content creators understand this and don't put any significant content above 80 Hz or so in the LFE track. I've found for my system 100Hz works best in minimizing lost content, sub/main integration, and non localization of the sub. You can do as Arny suggested and connect an external crossover to your mains for the sub and set the receiver to no sub. |
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