thanks for the welcome - been checking out the crutchfield site as i want to upgrade my stereo speakers - anyone have the infinity 6822cf speakers in their truck? i have done enough research to confuse the living hell out of me - ugh!!! they look like great speakers but i am worried about the comments about the bass - is it really that soft or are these people expecting it to sound like there is a sub in the vehicle? i am leaning toward the infinity do to the construction of the speaker and of course the reputation of the brand but crutchfield recomends the kicker speaker which i am not real fond of - man i got a bad bad headache - lol - any help would be appreciated!! i did install a kenwood deck unit and that made a big difference in the sound quality - just trying to decide if i should get speakers or just hang on to my money. thanks again!!
well, i think just about anything would be a step up from our factory paper cone speakers. for one, the polypropylene cone should move the bass a little better, and since this is a 2-way speaker (separate woofer/tweeter), your highs should sound good too, i'm not sure about the rotating tweeter.... yeah you can make use of the directionality, but that sounds like it may just be an unnecessary extra... not that it's a bad thing, just unnecessary.
49hz - 21,000hz does seem like the frequency response would be lacking a little in on the bottom end though.... 49hz is kindof borderline where a good solid bass "rumble" might begin.... but it depends on the style of music. unless you listen to a lot of bass-heavy rap, dance, R&B or anything of that nature you probably wont be missing a whole lot musically, and even if you do listen to that stuff, it would still probably be better than the factory speakers. i really havent done a lot of price-to-performance analysis on car speakers so i'm not too sure if this speaker is well priced or not.
in general though you want the frequency response to be
(lowest number possible)hz - (highest number possible)hz
perfect human hearing can only perceive roughly 20hz - 20,000hz so the closer you get to those figures, the better