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#16
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"I see," said the blind man. Thanks, Scott.
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#17
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Hi Deuce.
My suggestion is to use 8" subs instead. I don't know what your ability is when it comes to wood and fiberglass work but if your handy with them you can make a custom bottom doorpanel and mount them in there,just make sure the door is well dampend with dynamat or the like. If this is beyond your skill then have it done by a stereo store,it'll cost you some$$$ but you'll have BASS up front. Hope this helps. Louis. |
#18
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Thanks for the advice Louis! However, I sold the 124 to my father in May and now have a 210. The bass is much better in the 210, but the OEM Becker head unit makes it sound somewhat muddy. I'm thinking about putting in a good Alpine and see if using it with the OEM amps and speakers will sound better.
Later,
__________________
Deuce '02 CLK430 (Nightwing) 54K '11 ML350 109K '21 VW Atlas (Wife's Rocket) '94 Bronco XLT (Son 1) '06 Honda Odyssey 180K (Sold) '02 E320 151K (Sold) '96 E300D (RIP Riggo - 12/16/2010) 198K '03 Honda Odyssey 34K (Sold) '95 E300D 145K (Sold) '01 Mazda Tribute 19K (Sold) |
#19
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For 124, 210, or any other Mercedes check out the packages from Jehnert Sound Design. They're not cheap, but with two (or four!!) 6.5" midbass drivers in each front door you get a lot of bass up front, which helps fill in the upper bass frequencies before the subwoofer in the trunk takes over with the lower bass frequencies. They're not cheap, but the quality of the 124 door panels (which I bought) are top-notch... I was impressed.
http://www.jehnert.de/en |
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