Infinity Reference 6032cf 6.5-Inch 180-Watt High-Performance Two-Way Speakers (Pair)
date : January 10th, 2011Car speakers
Review : 3 Reviews
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List Price : $ 119.95
Price Now : $ 39.67
You saving : $ 80.28
Tags : 180Watt, 6.5Inch, 6032cf, HighPerformance, Infinity, Pair, Reference, Speakers, TwoWay
- 6-1/2-inch two-way loudspeaker with 180 Watts peak power handling and 2 Ohm impedance
- Plus One woofer cones and durable rubber surrounds for increased bass output and higher efficiency
- Edge-driven textile dome tweeters for increased power handling and reduced distortion at high output levels
- Tweeter level adjustment and swivel positioning for optimizing sound and stereo image
- One-year warranty
Looking for a more moving audio experience? Take Infinity car audio for a ride. Innovative materials and breakthrough engineering have always put Infinity products out in front of the competition’s. So expect extreme output from these speakers, but be prepared for accuracy and detail that may surprise you. Infinity Reference Series loudspeakers continue to be the top-selling premium speakers in the world. For instance, the 6-1/2-inch Reference coaxial model has been the number-one-selling car
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Great speakers for replacing OEM speakers in a 2001 Odyssey LX,
I just installed Infinity 6032cf speakers in the front doors of our Honda Odyssey 2001 LX. They fit, however, I had to clip the protruding plastic tabs off the included plastic mounting adapter, and clip two plastic tabs and a plastic ridge off the door that served to align the OEM speakers to make the mounting adapter fit. Then I had to trim some of the plastic inside the door to make room for the larger magnet of the Infinity speaker. The Honda speaker plug can easily be disassembled such that no additional crimp connectors are needed (the original ones that are inside the Honda plug can be used). The grills covering the speakers still fit after the Infinity 6032cf speakers were installed.
As to the sound, I am very satisfied with these speakers. To put my opinion in perspective, I am not the kind of person who needs an amp and subs to bother other motorists with their music. I was just looking for an upgrade to the terrible OEM speakers in the LX version of the 2001 Odyssey. The Infinity 6032cf speakers indeed provide a quite significant improvement in sound quality over the original speakers. In particular, bass is increased quite a bit and the included tweeters provide very clear highs. I should also mention that I am using the original Honda OEM cassette radio.
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|This factory replacement is the ti-taaays!,
Installed in a 1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee with Infinity. Installation is straight forward for an average car junky. The sound is full for a 6.5 and is a superb replacement for the factory speakers. On my ZJ, as with all my vehicles, I lightly sand the copper wires to remove any oxidation and gummy residue before soldering the contacts. I wasn’t impressed with the mini negative post. It’s clearly labeled so differentiating the terminals by size is unnecessary. There’s some cats outside my window having angry sex. It sounds hilarous. The foam dampeners included do a sufficient job of reducing vibrations, however, a little dynamat goes a long way. It may be necessary to drill through your sheet metal to properly install these speakers. Something to bear in mind before a DIY. Has anyone ever driven through Lancaster County PA? It smells like poo there. Sorry, got high while writing this.
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|These are great, but there is no reason you should ever buy them…,
These speakers will out-perform any other brand, generally, of the same size for under $100. I cannot recommend anyone to ever buy these, though. I’ll tell you why. Infinity sells a set of Infinity Kappa 6.5 on this very site for only $20 more. The improvements are very substantial. The Kappas have Infinity’s special glass-fiber woofer cone. I did a side-by-side comparison to eliminate the change for the placebo-effect to taint my judgment, and the Kappa’s mid-range just seemed a little sweeter and had more fidelity. The bass that the Kappa’s produces also seemed more musically accurate. Some speakers produce bass in a more punchy way. Some people prefer this type. The Kappa’s have a richer tonality and a smoother, more accurate bass reproduction. The Kappa’s also have a different tweeter. The tweeter is vastly superior to the Reference tweeter sound-wise, but isn’t just because of the tweeter itself. The Kappa has a computer-controlled cross-over that blurs the line between coaxial and component speakers in terms of sound quality. The Reference just have the typical capacitor wired in. Capacitors work just fine, and they’re what you have to expect for this price-point, but for $20 more, the computer-controlled cross-over is a no-brainer. A huge advantage about the more advanced cross-over is the low-pass on the woofers. All the higher frequencies on the Reference speakers come through the woofer and can come across distorted at higher volumes. Again, this is not a problem with the Kappas. I’d like to add that both speakers had a more than reasonably break-in–I’ve actually had the Kappas longer. I realize this isn’t a review for this particular product, but the Kappas are everything these are and more. I’d highly suggest spending the extra $20 and reaping all the benefits.
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