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There are a few types of speakers, but generally, the "voice coil" type speaker is the most common used for sound systems. It consists of a strong and lightweight paper or plastic cone which is attached to a coil. The coil is aligned so that it surrounds a magnet, but the magnet does not touch the coil. When a voltage potential is connected to the voice coil, the coil and therefore the cone moves. By applying voltage at a specific frequency, the voice coil will move in synchronization with the electrical frequency. The voice coil can be moving slowly, as is required by a low frequency sound, and at the same time a high frequency electrical signal can also be injected into the signal. By overlaying multiple electrical frequencies at the same time, the voice coil will move to produce a wide range of simultaneous sounds.

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Q: How do speakers produce the bass and treble at the same time?
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Why is your truck stereo louder on one side than the other?

Your speakers are not balanced. There should be settings for the speakers on the stereo that you can adjust for bal (balance) bass, treble etc. The balance # between these left and right speakers should be the same. If the volume is still imbalanced after adjusting the controls, there may be a problem in one of the speakers or in the radio.


Is A bass clef and a treble clef the same?

Clefs do not have 'sounds'. They are merely tools to indicate where on the musical stave notes are to be placed. However, the treble clef 'places' higher notes than the bass clef. If a clef is placed in the middle of the staff, then the notes that follow that clef are of that clef. For example, if the bass clef is placed on the treble staff, the notes that follow it are to be interpreted as "bass clef" notes and played using lower notes on the piano. The opposite is true if the treble clef is placed on the bass staff.


What is a treble Cleff in music?

A symbol indicating that the second line from the bottom of a staff represents the pitch of G above middle C. It's the clef that woodwinds play in. Bass clef is played in by brass players. -kani92 A Treble Clef is a symbol which represents the high pitched notes. It is also called the G clef because it starts on the second line of the Staff or Stave.A staff or stave is 5 lines and 4 spaces on which music notes are written on.


What does the flute play treble clef or bass clef?

Bass, but sometimes tenor when playing higher music. You'll sometimes come across treble clef in French and Belgian publications. It is used to avoid extra leger lines above the tenor clef.


How is a chromatic accordion different from a diatonic one?

Treble and bass buttons on diatonic accordions play two different notes on the push/pull of the bellows while treble and bass buttons on chromatic accordions play the same note regerdless of the bellows direction.


Can a bass guitar play directly into a cabinet without an amp?

No, a cabinet is just a speaker (or collection of speakers). A speaker needs to be amplified to produce sound. The same is true with headphones; they won't work plugged directly into an electric guitar or bass.


On a Baritone are bass clef notes lower than the treble clef?

yes. think of it as trumpet plays treble cleff. (high pitch instruments and sounds) trombone plays bass cleff (lower notes and sounds) The difference between the cleffs is 3 half steps (I believe) Typically bass cleff notes are lower but not always. It depends if the two are the same part. If you are asking about the treble clef baritone vs. bass clef baritone issue in bands, there's a catch: treble clef baritone players read notes written in the treble clef but the sound they make is actually a major 9th (octave + 1 whole step) lower. (E.g. if a treble-clef baritone player sees a middle C on the treble clef, the note that is actually played is a B-flat on the 2nd line from the bottom of the bass clef.) So actually, a bass-clef baritone part and a treble-clef baritone part from the same piece of music are probably identical in sound. They're just written differently. The reason: trumpet players, who usually play in a B-flat transposition (sounds a step lower, their written C comes out B-flat), can switch over to baritone more easily if they continue to read the same clef and finger the notes the same way. (Same thing is true of the saxophones, who all read basically the same range of the treble clef, finger more or less the same, but come out with sounds in very different registers.) It's pretty common, at least in U.S. schools, for baritone players to have started out as trumpet players, and this practice facilitates the switch. Most of the low brass world, though, uses untransposed bass clef--what you see is what you hear. Baritone players are well advised to learn bass clef as soon as possible. Still, they need to understand how the transposed treble-clef parts work--it's part of the environment.


What is the bass and treble staffs connected by a brace and a bar line in music?

The grand staff consists of a treble stave and a bass stave. They are connected by a vertical line creating a "system". The presence of this vertical line signifies that the two staves (treble and bass) are to be played at the same time.


What clef does the vibraphone use?

It uses the same setup as a piano: 1 staff in treble cleff and 1 staff in bass cleff.


What is gain knob for?

Gain is the INPUT volume of your guitar into the amp, drive select will select different types of distortion (or drive) and drive volume is the OUTPUT volume from the amp. Treble, Middle and Bass are all equalization knobs, turn the bass up for more bass in the signal and same applies with middle and treble or turn then down for less of the frequency in the signal


Is the F of the bass clef the same note as the lower F on the treble clef?

No. The lower F on the treble (the F directly abovemiddleC) is anoctave above the first F (second line down) in the bass clef.By the way, the shape of the bass clef is a stylized F, with the two dots above and below the second line from the top (the F we've been talking about).


What instrument plays treble clef?

The treble clef consists of notes above the bass clef, the answer has to be anything that generally plays higher notes than cellos, double basses, bass guitars, etc. That leaves you with things that can play notes in both the bass and treble clefs without much difficulty: french horns, pianos, bass trombones, bass clarinets, baritone and tenor saxes, violas, cellos, bass guitars. I suppose there are a few which have music written almost entirely in the treble clef: penny whistles, soprano saxes, descant recorders, Bach trumpets.