Getting the right sound system for your car is an important step if you are going to be spending a lot of time in your car and want to listen to music while there. Many of us put a lot of importance on sound quality when it comes to listening to music, and as can be seen by the increasing technical quality in home entertainment systems, people will pay a premium for the best systems. The deciding factor can be any one of a number of things. As important as any other factor is the kind of music you like listening to. There are many and various genres of music which are all highly popular, and a system that suits one may be entirely inappropriate for another.
Equally, the sound system needs to be one that suits your vehicle. It is not advisable to take a tip from a friend who has the same taste in music that you do, should their vehicle happen to be set up differently. Acoustics are very important, and spending a lot of money on a system is no guarantee of getting the right one – if the set up of the system is inefficient for the music to which you want to listen or the specifications of your car, then you are throwing money down the drain.
The system that is provided with your car is generally a “one size fits all” system that is not set up one way or the other – something that will be equally beneficial to all people, but not especially useful for you or another person with greatly differing tastes. These systems will be perfectly adequate for listening to the radio – particularly to news and chat shows as they allow the spoken word to be heard clearly – but if you are listening to music which is bass-heavy, or conversely to classical music which is dependent on subtlety and high notes, they will never give you excellent quality. It is in these latter cases that you will be best served by a bespoke sound system.
The inefficiency of a standard in-car sound system for specific can be easily demonstrated. If you are someone who enjoys bass-heavy music, playing one of your CDs on an in-car sound system and turning the volume up as loud as it can go will result in a distorted, tinny sound that will ruin the overall quality of the track. For such preferences, to adequately serve your needs you will require a set-up that favors this kind of music. For this you will be depending on a set of speakers that carry bass frequencies well – ideally with two large woofers and some sub-woofers, depending on the set-up of your car.
The sound delivery should be driven by an amplifier stronger than the one provided with the car – which usually only delivers a power output of comparatively low wattage. You should be looking for a wattage level of around 45 watts. Equally, if you listen to classical music, you can generally accept lower wattage, but will benefit from a sound system that favors tweeters rather than woofers, as these give a clearer, cleaner sound at high frequencies.
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