Sentences with phrase «claimed frequency response»

That leads to less bass, with a claimed frequency response of 70Hz to 25kHz.
An additional four - inch, up - firing driver hides beneath a metal speaker guard on top to bounce sound off your ceiling for height channels, with a claimed frequency response of 90Hz to 20kHz.
The 2 - way speakers achieve an impressive claimed frequency response of 51 Hz to 28 kHz, and they definitely pump out plenty of bass for their size.
All of these are driven by a 40W amplifier to achieve a claimed frequency response of 60Hz - 20kHz, -6 dB.
By the numbers, the u-Jays custom 40 mm dynamic drivers provide a claimed frequency response of 10Hz - 20kHz, a max SPL of 100dB at 1kHz, and a 32 - Ohm impedance rating.
The speaker offers a claimed frequency response of a massive 50kHz maximum, which extends a full 30kHz above the range of human hearing.
The claimed frequency response extends down to 40Hz on the low end (extending to 18kHz up top), and the default setting is fairly bass - heavy.
Add to that an almost ridiculous claimed frequency response stretching from 10Hz (nearly as low as you can go) to 50kHz (2.5 times higher than the limits of human hearing).
The stats for the Sine are impressive, including a claimed frequency response of 10Hz to 50kHz, a weight of just 230 grams (compare that to 548 grams for the LCD - 3), and a max SPL of 120 dB.
Crossovers for the drivers are set at 350Hz, and 2.1 khz, and the claimed frequency response starts all the way down at 45Hz, ending at 25kHz.
The total claimed frequency response is 26Hz - 40kHz.
The Phantom's claimed frequency response — a dazzling 16Hz - 25khz — will no doubt cause audioholics to perk up in disbelief and collectively ask, «How is that much bass even possible from such a small speaker?»
The system has a claimed frequency response of 60Hz - 20kHz, which seems congruent with our testing, though it predictably doesn't offer much power at the lowest point.

Not exact matches

Physicists from the UC Berkeley, have used graphene to create ultra-thin, lightweight microphones and speakers that enable high - quality, ultrasonic two - way communication and a frequency response that is claimed to be flat across the entire audible spectrum.
Each speaker is powered by a 50 - watt class - D driver, and IK claims they are tuned for extremely flat frequency response.
The frequency response is a claimed 80Hz - 20kHz, though the speaker cuts off in the low end sharply at what sounds like a bit before that 80Hz mark.
HiFiMan claims this results in a wider frequency response and because these are open - back, it's safe to assume that sound stage is going to benefit greatly as well.
The rated frequency response for this speaker is 40Hz - 20kHz / + - 2db, which seems like a pretty bold claim.
Frequency response for the S20 is a claimed 39Hz - 40kHz, and we'll tell you right now that we're pretty impressed by just how low they go.
Klipsch claims the frequency range goes all the way down to 5Hz, however, which is about as low as consumer earphones go — but that doesn't necessarily translate to deep bass response (see the next section for a close look at audio performance).
Internally, each earpiece employs a unique array of a 10 mm dynamic driver and dual balanced armature drivers working together to deliver what Fidue claims is a frequency response of 9Hz to 31kHz.
Apple claims they're not only three times louder then the previous speakers, but that they have a wider frequency range and response as well, for deeper bass and richer mid and high tones.
Sonos doesn't publish audio specs to support my claims, but according to a technical analysis by fellow reviewer Mark Henninger from AVSForum, the PLAY: 5 has a functional frequency response of 30Hz — 20kHz.
By the numbers, the HD 6XX tout a massive frequency response of a claimed 10Hz - 41khz, which is otherworldly for headphones well below $ 500.
The recently reviewed JH Audio Roxanne flaunts 12 drivers per ear, while the UE 18 Pro + deliver audio through six drivers with a four - way crossover system, all upgraded from the previous UE 18 Pro's drivers to Ultimate Ears» proprietary True Tone drivers, which the company claims add an additional 3kHz of high frequency response.
Design The narrow earpieces of the X20i have a metallic and rubber exterior, each housing two drivers — a balanced armature tweeter and woofer that Klipsch claims offer a frequency response of 5Hz - 40kHz.
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