is there any way to make my mark levinson speaker louder?
#18
Why is everyone hating on the OP? It doesn't really help anyone if everyone is going at him.
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
The following users liked this post:
Mbbalagj (09-05-20)
#19
Lexus Champion
iTrader: (1)
Why is everyone hating on the OP? It doesn't really help anyone if everyone is going at him.
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
But imagine someone posting can I make my LS faster? What's faster? ET? Top speed? Passing gears? Specifics lead to better responses and suggestions.
#20
Lexus Fanatic
Why is everyone hating on the OP? It doesn't really help anyone if everyone is going at him.
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
Anyway, to answer the OP's question, there's no real way to make the stock ML system 'louder' without replacing a significant amount of hardware. With the current ML system it starts distorting once you turn it up to about 95% and this could be due to either the amp or the speakers themselves. So at the very least you'd need new speakers and a new amp (or amps).
#22
Well, we don't really know much about the person who started this thread.
It could be someone who has a problem with their car audio system and needs the help of some of our experts. I can think of several maladjustments of the speaker balance and equalizer that would make the maximum volume seem sort of tame. I know we have denizens here who know a lot more about this than I do - this may be your chance to help someone.
Maybe we should say something like: the ML system in the LS460/600s is capable of producing enough volume to satisfy most owners requirements. And ask if the person who started this discussion has some special requirement or situation.
It could be someone who is new to the car or has a broken system.
Remember, it is questions from newcomers that help keep this site alive and interesting.
It could be someone who has a problem with their car audio system and needs the help of some of our experts. I can think of several maladjustments of the speaker balance and equalizer that would make the maximum volume seem sort of tame. I know we have denizens here who know a lot more about this than I do - this may be your chance to help someone.
Maybe we should say something like: the ML system in the LS460/600s is capable of producing enough volume to satisfy most owners requirements. And ask if the person who started this discussion has some special requirement or situation.
It could be someone who is new to the car or has a broken system.
Remember, it is questions from newcomers that help keep this site alive and interesting.
#24
Lexus Champion
iTrader: (1)
Well, we don't really know much about the person who started this thread.
It could be someone who has a problem with their car audio system and needs the help of some of our experts. I can think of several maladjustments of the speaker balance and equalizer that would make the maximum volume seem sort of tame. I know we have denizens here who know a lot more about this than I do - this may be your chance to help someone.
Maybe we should say something like: the ML system in the LS460/600s is capable of producing enough volume to satisfy most owners requirements. And ask if the person who started this discussion has some special requirement or situation.
It could be someone who is new to the car or has a broken system.
Remember, it is questions from newcomers that help keep this site alive and interesting.
It could be someone who has a problem with their car audio system and needs the help of some of our experts. I can think of several maladjustments of the speaker balance and equalizer that would make the maximum volume seem sort of tame. I know we have denizens here who know a lot more about this than I do - this may be your chance to help someone.
Maybe we should say something like: the ML system in the LS460/600s is capable of producing enough volume to satisfy most owners requirements. And ask if the person who started this discussion has some special requirement or situation.
It could be someone who is new to the car or has a broken system.
Remember, it is questions from newcomers that help keep this site alive and interesting.
#25
If you find an aftermarket amp that has as many channel output for the speakers as the ML amp, you let me know. I've heard a car with Focal speakers setup and the sound quality surpasses the quality of the ML setup given the amount of speakers it has. If you want to go louder, the power that sends to the speakers is the source you need to look at.
#26
Lexus Champion
iTrader: (1)
If you find an aftermarket amp that has as many channel output for the speakers as the ML amp, you let me know. I've heard a car with Focal speakers setup and the sound quality surpasses the quality of the ML setup given the amount of speakers it has. If you want to go louder, the power that sends to the speakers is the source you need to look at.
#27
Lexus Champion
the biggest problem with any auto sound system is the source of the sound.
if you are streaming from your phone or an MP3 device the "loudness" is going to suck, especially if you are streaming through Bluetooth or USB.
while USB is better than Bluetooth, the fact is the bandwidth for streaming in these manners is very low so you lose a lot of the mid range and bottom end, as such you have to crank the volume up to 35-45 to get the full range of the sound, be even at that it is lacking a lot of the bottom end.
using a "headphone" jack cable is a bit better, but the best way is using a CD or DVD with loaded with Lossless (not Lossy) music files.
Lossy music formats (compressed music digital files) like MP3 or AAC take a lot of the quality of the music away, streaming services like Pandora and Slacker use similar Lossy formats to stream and their compression is even worse than an MP3.
Lossless formats such as AIFF, FLAC, WAV, WMA, DSD, or SACD use the full digital file and you don't lose quality, therefore the music from these sources will appear to be "louder" which is a bad term, the proper term is that they are complete, highs, mids, and lows, nothing is lost therefore the music is more complete, crisp, and will seem to be louder, that is you will not have to turn the volume up to 40 to get the full range of the music, 20-25 works just fine.
The problem with Lossless is the files are HUGE, a 700mb CD can only hold 8-12 songs in Lossless formats, vs. 500-600 in MP3 format.
If you are like me and like crisp full range music, then Lossless is the only way to go. I come from a family of musicians, and I am not tone deaf, I can clearly pull out the lows, mids, and highs and hear when music is not properly staged.
Personally IMO a car is by far the worst environment for quality music..
so to answer your question, if you are using an mp3 type player or phone you can do a few simple things to make the sound louder:
1. make sure the volume of your mp3 device is turned all the way up,
2. use the headphone jack and plug into the 3.5mm port instead of using Bluetooth
3. try some good quality Lossless music (go buy a CD) and hear the difference.
if you are streaming from your phone or an MP3 device the "loudness" is going to suck, especially if you are streaming through Bluetooth or USB.
while USB is better than Bluetooth, the fact is the bandwidth for streaming in these manners is very low so you lose a lot of the mid range and bottom end, as such you have to crank the volume up to 35-45 to get the full range of the sound, be even at that it is lacking a lot of the bottom end.
using a "headphone" jack cable is a bit better, but the best way is using a CD or DVD with loaded with Lossless (not Lossy) music files.
Lossy music formats (compressed music digital files) like MP3 or AAC take a lot of the quality of the music away, streaming services like Pandora and Slacker use similar Lossy formats to stream and their compression is even worse than an MP3.
Lossless formats such as AIFF, FLAC, WAV, WMA, DSD, or SACD use the full digital file and you don't lose quality, therefore the music from these sources will appear to be "louder" which is a bad term, the proper term is that they are complete, highs, mids, and lows, nothing is lost therefore the music is more complete, crisp, and will seem to be louder, that is you will not have to turn the volume up to 40 to get the full range of the music, 20-25 works just fine.
The problem with Lossless is the files are HUGE, a 700mb CD can only hold 8-12 songs in Lossless formats, vs. 500-600 in MP3 format.
If you are like me and like crisp full range music, then Lossless is the only way to go. I come from a family of musicians, and I am not tone deaf, I can clearly pull out the lows, mids, and highs and hear when music is not properly staged.
Personally IMO a car is by far the worst environment for quality music..
so to answer your question, if you are using an mp3 type player or phone you can do a few simple things to make the sound louder:
1. make sure the volume of your mp3 device is turned all the way up,
2. use the headphone jack and plug into the 3.5mm port instead of using Bluetooth
3. try some good quality Lossless music (go buy a CD) and hear the difference.
#29
That was a lighthearted reference to the Spinal Tap rock band parody movie.
In it the band replaced the ***** that normally are labeled 1 - 10 with *****
that were printed with a scale that went 1 - 11. Same amp, same actual
volume but you could "turn it up to 11!" Much better, right? Oh yeah, much!
In it the band replaced the ***** that normally are labeled 1 - 10 with *****
that were printed with a scale that went 1 - 11. Same amp, same actual
volume but you could "turn it up to 11!" Much better, right? Oh yeah, much!
#30
Lead Lap
iTrader: (2)
Well, back to the original question, I noticed that the volume of my 2014 LS460 ML system was much lower than my 2007. I'm guessing this was deliberate to avoid having to replace blown speakers and subs in the original car. I also noticed that the sound is far more forward biased in the 2014 than the 2007 (which may contribute to some of the perceived loss in volume).
Fatalexx - I see you have a 2010 - don't know if they tweaked the ML volume with the 2010 update - anybody else know?
Fatalexx - I see you have a 2010 - don't know if they tweaked the ML volume with the 2010 update - anybody else know?