Fido
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Featured
- #441
Putting fancy hi-if into a car is never going to be easy. There is very little about the interior of a car that is acoustically friendly as everything is designed with its primary function in mind and not the audio performance. Who at home has speaker cabinets that are shaped like car doors? And who sits with their head 6 inches from their window? Add to that the A-symmetry of having the key occupant off-set in the auditorium. Plus the constant competition with air and structure borne noise that varies with road and engine speed and you have a pretty daunting task. So given the constraints, unless the interior team do a really fantastic job and fill the car with dead sheep to absorb all of the stray noise, or employ some fancy new acoustic noise cancelling (this works well with predictable noise, like engine order noise, tyre thrum and some wind noise. But less well with more random inputs like rain/puddles, gusts and potholes). What can you do? Well firstly try and make it as quiet as possible in the car. And then provide as many, reasonable quality sound sources as you can pointing towards the occupants. Then digitally manipulate the whole affaire to make it sound as least compromised as possible. The other problem is that by and large, more watts means more heat and power demand to manage, and better speakers mean bigger, heavier magnets or very sexy and expensive materials. Most manufacturers now make a pretty good fist of making a half decent in-car audio system, I anticipate that the base audio will be fit for purpose. The premium system will have more oomph but will be no less compromised in purist terms, although most will feel it sounds better.