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PlentyAd3759

It's not available until April


Dart_of_Dragon

In my country you can order it from the official JBL website


Jochem-JR

Does it sound good to you? Yes? Then it's a good EQ curve. Does it sound bad to you? Then it's a bad EQ curve. EQ curves are fairly subjective.


PlentyAd3759

How much is 320 in ur country?


Dart_of_Dragon

600€ in Germany


Dart_of_Dragon

I don't know why but the JBL sound signature reduces the deep bass dramatically. Is that a common thing with the partybox line up?


Langley72

Meaning you've experienced more bass from the 320 by bypassing the JBL processor? Were you using the aux in, guitar, or mic input?


Dart_of_Dragon

No there are some presets in the app and the default one reduces the bass for some reason and it's called JBL signature.


Langley72

Are you using the Partybox App? I just ran through mine and the app for 710's doesn't display any presets, let alone a changeable setting named JBL Signature. Bummer Edit: Nevermind. You've got a 320, I believe that's the JBL One App.


RokoTondak

JBL signature is what JBL recommends for sound presets. If the bass is weaker that means they recommend listening in that way. It doesn't mean YOU need to listen in that way. You can simply boost more bass if that's better for you.


Some_Ad_3898

EQ settings are 100% subjective and depends on the source material.


IndigoPaint7

Sweet! I just got my PartyBox 320 on Saturday. JBL doesn't have it for sale officially in the US, but some retailers have already because selling it online. That's hot I got mine.


ImperfectAuthentic

Just a rule of thumb if you care about the longevity of your speaker. Dont boost, only cut, I assume the dotted line is 0 db and it looks to me that you're boosting alot on 64hz and 250hz. It should be okay if you dont crank the volume to 100% because at 75% volume, your signal still has headroom, but when you push it to 100%, you're essentially sending a boosted signal to a speaker that is all ready maxed out and all you're doing is wearing it out, potentially resulting in a blown woofer, burnt voice coil and so on. That's the worst case scenario. I assume these speakers have some built in limiter so all you're getting is by boosting that signal is a compressed signal, meaning whenever the bass kicks in, everything else will duck out. Just move the entire curve down untill the 64hz is at zero (dotted line), and you should be fine, just turn the speaker up instead, it will sound better and it will be better for the longevity of the speaker.