Sandbox

From Bose Portable PA Encyclopedia
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This "sandbox" page is to allow you to carry out experiments. Please feel free to try your skills at formatting here. If you want to learn more about how to edit a wiki, please read this introduction or the tutorial at Wikipedia.

To edit, click here or "edit" at the top of the page, make your changes in the dialog box, and click the "Save page" button when you are finished.


Content added here will not stay permanently; this page is cleaned regularly.

Testing Area

Sandbox   L1™ Unofficial Users' Guide    


Top Level Heading

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Sub Heading

Some more text. This is the Sandbox (example of a magic word)

{{PAGENAME}}.

More in Magic Words ← this is an internal page link!

[[{{PAGENAME}}#Magic Words|Magic Words]]

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Bullets

  • Wikis are fun
  • Wikis are easy
  • Less coding that is needed for most forums

Numbered Bullets

  1. Wire up the PS1 Powerstand connections
  2. Connect the B1
  3. Insert the L1™ Cylindrical Radiator sections
  4. Turn down the R1 Remote Master Level
  5. Power on the System

Italics

Bold

Link to an external image (just type in the URL) like this image from the Bose Site

tonematch_01.jpg

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Magic Words

There are currently 944 articles and 4,348 users.

There are currently {{NUMBEROFARTICLES}} articles and {{NUMBEROFUSERS}} users.

Template with Parameters

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PAS L1™

Email Link

email me

Templates for L1™ components

{{A1}} becomes PackLite® power amplifier model A1

{{A1 EB}} becomes PackLite® power amplifier model A1 Extended Bass Package

{{B1}} becomes B1 Bass Module

{{L1}} becomes L1

{{L1 CR}} becomes L1 Cylindrical Radiator® loudspeaker

{{PS1}} becomes PS1 Power Stand (Classic) / Model I

{{PAS}} becomes Bose® Personalized Amplification System™ family of products

Templates (more)

{{Bose}} becomes Bose®

{{forum}} becomes Bose® Pro Portable PA Community


Linked Image Example

only works for links to internal wiki pages

<linkedimage> wikipage=The Bose® L1™ Wiki tooltip=Main Page img_src=L1doubleWA1.gif img_width=138px img_height=200px img_alt=Sampletext </linkedimage>

<linkedimage> wikipage=The Bose® L1™ Wiki tooltip=Main Page img_src=L1doubleWA1.gif img_alt=No width or height specified </linkedimage>

LiveSaver Test

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/LiveSaver

Test for Inclusion

Cliff-at-Bose wrote[1]


Depends on the wall construction. Most drywall will reinforce midbass (like 100-250 Hz) and let the deeper octave or so pass right on thru giving you little reinforcement from reflection. So if you push your bass boxes up against the wall, you'll tend to get a lot of midbass with a typical drywall-constructed wall. And, yeah, then it will be muddy. Most walls don't reflect sound uniformly with frequency, so you get a change in spectrum you probably don't want no matter what. One possible exception to this is, say, 6" thick concrete with a 1/4" thick lining of steel. Oh, and don't take my word for it either. Do it yourself and see what you hear. Also, aiming the individual bass boxes won't have much effect as they are so much smaller than the wavelengths they are producing that they are virtually omni. For instance, a 125Hz wavelength is on the order of 8 feet. A pair of b1's on each side of your ps1 will give you a hotter midbass down the middle and not so off to the side. Here, you've essentially made a crude bass array. So, my experience with all this tells me that the most consistant way to set the bass up, gig to gig, is to lump the bass boxes together and keep them away from the walls. You won't get the extra bass boost from the walls, but if you did, it wouldn't be wideband. I think you'll always do better not asking the wall to help. You know what they say about free help (you get what you pay for). This works for bass players, dj's and so on.

Thickbox

Presets - Ken Jacob 01

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