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Passive Eq Schematic -

“So how do we choose the frequency?” Maya asked.

He drew a small triangle. “A ‘boost’ is just a cut of everything else . You have a pot wired as a variable resistor in series with the LC network. Turn it one way: the LC network is grounded, so it steals that frequency and shunts it to ground. That’s a cut . Turn it the other way: you actually insert a resistor that bypasses the LC network, making the unfiltered path louder relative to the filtered path. It’s an illusion. You’re just attenuating the whole signal less.” Passive Eq Schematic

Eli pointed to the “Boost/Cut” section. “But here’s the clever part. A passive EQ can’t add energy. So how do you get a ‘boost’?” “So how do we choose the frequency

“That’s why you need this,” Eli said, tapping the far-right side of the schematic. “The ‘Output Attenuator’ or a separate make-up gain amplifier. After you’ve passively carved out frequencies, the overall level drops—sometimes by 20 dB or more. A passive EQ is useless without a clean, quiet preamp after it to bring the volume back up.” You have a pot wired as a variable

“See this thick line?” Eli pointed. “That’s the main audio path. Signal comes in from your preamp. It hits a transformer first—that’s the ‘Input.’ The transformer does two things: it balances the signal, and more importantly, it provides the impedance . Passive EQs need a strong, low-impedance driver to work. Feed it a weak signal? You’ll hear the highs die immediately.”

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