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- Plano, Texas, USA
Why does it say BLOSE and Suck So Much, Here's Why!

Boy, this is one of the worst frequency response curve out of speakers I've ever seen! Of course Mazda's penny-saving decision to eliminate Bose recommended dash tweeters makes it even worse! Thanks for doing the test and this should silent those who keep defending Bose "premium" audio system on CX-5s! And I always thought my hearing is degrading but now apparently it's not (yet).I finally got around to curving my 2015 Blose audio system. I used an HP 204C signal generator into the AUX in port. The curve is of the right channel with the volume set to 25, max bass CUT, treble at +4 tics and fader 4 tics to the rear. The meter was a Rat Shack Analog meter, aimed at the right most A/C vent and the readings were corrected using the published correction curve for the analog meter. The engine was off and all the windows and doors were all shut. The left channel did not change the response curve much, other than adding ~10 dB.
I have fooled with this thing from the day I got it trying to get a nearly flat curve and this is the best I can do, with just fader, bass and treble. More treble raises the 3k screech without improving the response above 7k. It appears the tone controls are shelving types and there is no way to kill the 14 dB (Dayum!!!!!) hump at 40 Hz. Remember, 10 dB is twice/half as loud, 14 dB is getting close to 3x different. Realistically, +/- 5 dB is good, especially in a car, and you might listen through the +/- 8dB swings in the midrange, but this system is supposedly custom designed for this vehicle and EQ'd just for it. Blose(/Mazda?) utterly FAILED. There is little point in trying for response above 15k in a car because of wind noise and most people can't hear that high (I can't).
I'd say there is no solution other than to replace the Blose Amp, front door woofers and dash tweeters.
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