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Saturday, April 5, 2008

Dayton SD215-88 8" Shielded DVC Subwoofer

The new Dayton Loudspeaker Shielded DVC Subwoofers are a breakthrough series, offering outstanding displacement-per-dollar. With a good Xmax and long-throw design, these subs can produce solid amounts of bass even with small amplifiers, making them perfect for building economic subwoofer systems. They feature poly coated paper cones, medium-roll butyl rubber surrounds, large voice coils, vented pole pieces, bumped back plates, and a magnetically shielded motor structure. These elements combine to give 18 Kicker Subwoofer woofers good power handling and make them dependable for years of reliable service. They are very versatile in design, working well in both sealed and vented enclosures, while the DVC configuration allows for multiple connection options. The magnetically shielded nature makes them excellent for high-intensity computer sound systems, or for home theater systems where the subwoofer must be placed close to a CRT television. Note: All specifications are with voice coils connected in parallel. Specifications: *Power Handling: 80 watts RMS/120 watts max *VCdia: 1.5" *Le: 1.2 mH *Impedance: 8 ohms per coil *Re: 3.00 ohms *Frequency range: 30-2,000 Hz *Fs: 28 Hz *SPL: 89.0 dB 2.83V/1m *Vas: 1.40 cu. ft. *Qms: 3.40 *Qes: .47 *Qts: .41 *Xmax: 6 mm *Dimensions: Overall Diameter: 8-1/2", Cutout Diameter: 7-1/8", Mounting Depth: 4-1/4".


Because the use of broadband to connect to the internet is becoming more and more popular, video advertising is becoming the way to go. More and more advertisers are choosing to use video in their marketing strategies. As the online environment becomes increasingly ad-cluttered, these video ads are more apt to catch prospective buyers' attention.

Although video can cost much more to implement than standard banners because they involve a lot more work to produce, if they achieve a greater response rate, then they may well be worth the cost. In order to maximize the effect of online video, advertisers must carefully consider where they are using it. Video used on the internet must be informative and cater towards communicating with the user. Television based video should be geared more toward entertainment.

Right now, video is being used to incorporate audio-visual content into embedded formats such as banners that already exists or into pop-ups or pop-unders. However, like everything else in life, this has both positive and negative connotations.

While pop-ups or pop-unders can potentially reach a much larger audience, internet surfers are much less likely to be interested in them and it could potentially kill any chances the publisher had of selling anything. Think about it, how would you like to go to the grocery store to do your weekly shopping and have a car salesman jump in front of you trying to sell you a car every time you went there? A better way to get consumers interested in a product is to use a cached or streaming video. This can be done by placing the video on a specifically designed website. However, if this does not generate a viral outcome, it will not reach a large audience.

Another way to distribute your video that will reach more people, is to capitalize on the use of email. The viral impact of your video will be much better because it will reach more people, compared to hosting it on a website. This is also much more cost effective, especially if you don't have a website.

Once you've created your video and are ready to distribute it online, you must make sure that the file size is not too great and the format it comes in is a popular one. If the viral video is formatted for a type of software that not many people use, then you can not expect a wide distribution of your video. Video is most effectively viralized by the simple sending of the file as a free gift or, if you do have a website, having a free download of your video.

Remember, the more people that see your video, the more prospective buyers you will reach. The more prospective buyers you reach, the more sales you will make and the more sales you make, the more income you will produce.

Michelle A. Hoffmann is a Work at Home mother of 4, author, website designer, internet marketer and ezine editor/publisher/owner. You can read more of her articles at http://www.24karatmarketer.com