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Comparison JBL 306P MkII vs JBL 308P MkII

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JBL 306P MkII
JBL 308P MkII
JBL 306P MkIIJBL 308P MkII
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Main
Level, sensitivity adjustment
Adjustment of level, sensitivity. Branded JBL waveguides. Equalizers to compensate for the sound depending on the room. genre versatility.
Featuresmonitormonitor
Mountshelfshelf
Specs
Typeactiveactive
Number of channels1.01.0
Number of speakers22
Number of bands22
Sensitivity92 dB92 dB
Impedance8 Ohm8 Ohm
Crossover frequency1.425 kHz1.8 kHz
Power / frequency
Total rated power112 W112 W
Overall frequency range
47 – 20000 Hz /± 3 дБ/
45 – 20000 Hz
Design
Design features
phase inverter back
treble adjustment
horn design
phase inverter back
treble adjustment
horn design
Connectors
Inputs
Jack (6.35 mm) and XLR
Jack (6.35 mm) and XLR
General
Tweeter size25 mm25 mm
Woofer size (LF/MF)165 mm203 mm
Finishing materialMDFMDF
Front speaker dimensions (HxWxD)36.1x22.4x28.2 cm41.9х25.4х30.8 cm
Weight6.1 kg8.1 kg
Color
Added to E-Catalogdecember 2018july 2018

Crossover frequency

The crossover frequency provided in the speaker design.

A crossover is installed exclusively in a multi-band model (see "Number of Bands"). This is an electronic filter that ensures the division of the incoming audio signal into separate frequency ranges and directs each range to "its" set of speakers. And the crossover frequency shows where the boundary between these ranges lies. If there are more than two bands, there will be several such boundaries: for example, for a four-band system it may be specified "0.15 / 0.8 / 2.8 kHz" or "0.12 / 1 / 3.8".

In most cases, this parameter has mainly a reference value: the frequencies of the built-in crossover are selected to match the operating characteristics of the speakers installed in the speaker system.

Overall frequency range

The total frequency range that the speaker is capable of reproducing. Specified from the bottom of the range in the lowest frequency component to the top of the range in the highest frequency: for example, in a 2.1 system with main speakers at 100 – 22000 Hz and a subwoofer at 20 – 150 Hz, the total value will be 20 – 22000 Hz.

The wider the frequency range — the fuller the reproduced sound, the lower the likelihood that some part of the low or high frequencies will be "cut off". It is worth noting here that the human ear perceives frequencies on average from 16 Hz to 22 kHz, and from a practical point of view, it makes no sense to provide a wider frequency range in speakers. However, quite a few models go beyond this range, sometimes quite significantly (for example, there are speakers with a range of about 10 – 50,000 Hz). Such characteristics are a kind of "side effect" of high-end acoustics, and they are usually given for advertising purposes.

Thus, the lower limit of the range in modern speakers can be within frequencies up to 20 Hz, however, higher values \u200b\u200bare more common — 30 – 40 Hz, 40 – 50 Hz, or even more than 70 Hz. In turn, the upper limit in most modern speakers lies in the range 19 – 22 kHz, although there are deviations both upwards (see above) and downwards.

Woofer size (LF/MF)

The diameter of the woofer or combined woofer/midrange speaker(s). The larger the speaker, the lower its operating frequencies and the more sound power it can provide. Therefore, you should pay special attention to this parameter if you want to get high-quality rich bass - especially if we are talking about an audio system without a subwoofer. More detailed information about speaker sizes can be found in special sources.

Weight

The total weight of all components of the speaker system.