Marine Speakers

Marine speakers are essential for stereo sound in a wet environment, whether on a boat, an open off-road vehicle or even near a hot tub or pool. They thrive in places a standard car stereo speaker would be destroyed. Sealed drivers and waterproof cones can withstand a hosing down of a deck, rain and sometimes complete submersion. Corrosion resistant parts withstand the salt air and moisture.
With that established, what are the best speakers for your situation?
FIRST: Consider Cutout Size
If you are replacing existing marine speakers you may have a cutout hole that you need to fit the replacement speakers into. This will narrow down your search considerably so that must be the first consideration.
If you will be cutting a new hole for new flush mount speakers, you need to first measure the area so that you know the limits to the speaker size you can fit. As a general rule, larger speakers will give you better overall sound, so try to find the largest space available. Don't just consider the cutout size, but the depth of space behind the speaker. There needs to be enclosed air space behind and around the speaker to improve the resonance of the sound. Make sure the speakers are pointed in the direction of your ears.
You may want to consider box speakers if you can't find a place to cut a hole. Box speakers already come with an enclosure so you don't need to worry about having the proper amount of air space around them.
The number of speakers you purchase will depend on how you plan to power your system. Take a look at our installation page for more information.
SECOND: Consider Speaker Quality
The quality of a speaker depends greatly upon the frequency range of sound that it is able to reproduce. The easiest frequencies to reproduce are the mid-range frequencies while deep bass and clear highs are more difficult. This is the difference between say, a telephone speaker and a stereo speaker. Telephone speakers reproduce only mid range frequencies and that is fine for a human voice, but high quality realistic sound needs much more bass and treble.
There are essentially 4 different types of speakers:
THIRD: Consider Power Handling
To avoid damaging the speakers it is best to use speakers with a higher power handling ability than the stereo amplifier. On the other hand, it is important to understand that power handling capacity does not necessarily equal volume since the power comes from the amp and not the speakers. It is possible to get the same performance from a set of speakers with a power figure just above that of the amplifier than from speakers with a much higher power figure run from the same amplifier.
That having been said, if you think you might want to upgrade your system with a more powerful amp later, go for speakers with higher power handling so that they can handle the increase in power.
There are two important power measurements to consider:
Unfortunately manufacturers like to stress the peak wattage of their speakers (because it sounds cool) while the RMS (which is actually more important) often goes into the fine print or is not published at all. Ideally, you want to get speakers with an RMS power figure above that of the RMS figure of the stereo head or amplifier. In the absence of RMS data, go ahead and compare the Peak Wattage.
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