Bose System
Yes exactly!!
I would a customer come in the shop and state "I want a BAD AS* SOUND SYSTEM" !!! Then you tell the cost, all of a sudden they start down grading from their first request when they see the $$ it takes to build one. And ten when you do settle on a system and set everything for the best sound reproduction they go in and change all the setting included the gains and frequencies of cross overs on the amps or sound processor. Or they later complain that as they are driving 65-95mph on the highway the sound starts to degrade, and they can't hear all the highs or feel the bass anymore. LOL
I would a customer come in the shop and state "I want a BAD AS* SOUND SYSTEM" !!! Then you tell the cost, all of a sudden they start down grading from their first request when they see the $$ it takes to build one. And ten when you do settle on a system and set everything for the best sound reproduction they go in and change all the setting included the gains and frequencies of cross overs on the amps or sound processor. Or they later complain that as they are driving 65-95mph on the highway the sound starts to degrade, and they can't hear all the highs or feel the bass anymore. LOL
The primary problem is being an armor officer for my first couple of years in the Army, followed by a year in Viet Nam firing M16's with no hearing protection. I can't tell when the cicadas come out any more as I hear them all the time.
In my 2023 Mazda CX-5 with the Bose Sound System, the centre dashboard speaker is active during music playback. Its contribution becomes significantly more noticeable when Centerpoint is enabled, as this engages Bose's surround algorithm to extract and route centre image content (typically vocals) to the centre channel.
In standard stereo mode (Centerpoint off or at zero), the dashboard speaker appears to be either inactive or minimally engaged, though I can't confirm that definitively. Perhaps someone else can clarify?
To test this yourself: enable Centerpoint (on or at it's maximum level), and play a stereo track where the lead vocal is strongly centred. You should hear a clear difference if you temporarily block the centre speaker (e.g. with a small cloth). The vocal will lose focus and presence, indicating that the centre channel is actively reinforcing the surround image.
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