



SOLD AS A PAIR, Many Frequencies Available - Contact us if you need help selecting the proper frequency. The Harrison Labs FMOD is an in-line active crossover simulator. FMOD's are passive so noise free & better than a much more expensive electronic crossover that requires power to operate. Frequencies available for every need such as: Subsonic filter, Subwoofer, Woofer, Midbass, Midrange, Tweeter, Super Tweeter, Horns and Ultrasonic filter Combine with other FMODs & traditional electronic crossovers for bandpass ranges or to change the slope and crossover frequency point Install in seconds by placing the FMOD in-line with the RCA patch cable running between the source (head unit/preamp/etc) and the amplifier Low Pass available Frequencies: 50, 70, 100, 150, 200, 500, 1000, 2500, 3500, 6500, 20K High Pass Available Frequencies: 20, 30, 50, 70, 100, 150, 200, 300, 500, 1000, 2500, 3500, 6500 Review: Works as expected, sounds good, no notes. Not a lot of options for this item but this brand seems pretty good for the price. Review: I'm using these 100Hz high pass filters with some bookshelf speakers that have fantastic highs and mids but utterly inadequate bass from their punchy little aluminum woofers that are otherwise a great match to the air motion transformer tweeters. Previously, any kind of dance music would send the woofers into full excursion. Now, with the filters installed and the subwoofer blended in, I can crank dance music at full volume, and it sounds fantastic.
| ASIN | B0006N41KG |
| Best Sellers Rank | 106,743 in Musical Instruments & DJ ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments & DJ ) 192 in Rack Effects & Signal Processors |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item model number | 1 |
| Manufacturer | Harrison Labs |
| Package Dimensions | 8.25 x 4.19 x 0.41 cm; 40.82 g |
J**M
Works as expected, sounds good, no notes. Not a lot of options for this item but this brand seems pretty good for the price.
J**Y
I'm using these 100Hz high pass filters with some bookshelf speakers that have fantastic highs and mids but utterly inadequate bass from their punchy little aluminum woofers that are otherwise a great match to the air motion transformer tweeters. Previously, any kind of dance music would send the woofers into full excursion. Now, with the filters installed and the subwoofer blended in, I can crank dance music at full volume, and it sounds fantastic.
S**B
they can't be used as a high lvl xover, just as a preamp/low lvl. they filter everything wonderfully. they are perfect for sending a filtered signal to your mids/hi's amp. i tested them on the low lvl inputs to my receiver from the aux connection to my computer, and they performed beautifully. since they are preamp, the load doesn't matter. there was a teenie bit of distortion during the bass tones (tested with techmaster p.e.b, bass quake, etc) however with the sub present it all but cancels that out. perfect for keeping it simple stupid.
C**S
I have a pair of 6x9s in my vehicle. They sound great, but at higher volumes the bass tones seem to overwork the speakers and the mids and highs suffer. I have a sub in my system so I don't need the 6x9s outputting low frequencies anyway, and wanted to get a passive crossover to cut out the bass from them. These seem to work great. Plug right into the RCA inputs, and the low tones are cut completely out of the signal chain before they even get to the amp.
P**K
I ordered the 100 Hz high pass crossovers and while it does seem to attenuate some of the sub bass it is not creating a true high pass filter. My setup goes PC -> external DAC -> (line-level) SVS SB1000 Pro -> 100 Hz high pass crossover -> amp. I can turn the amp on and off and clearly feel/see the woofer moving at sub-bass levels. I'll keep them because they do lower the amount of low frequency signal going to my speakers but this isn't a silver bullet solution.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago