How Bass Boost Works
Bass boost applies a low-shelf EQ filter centered at 100 Hz. Everything below this frequency gets amplified by your chosen amount — frequencies above remain untouched. This is the same type of filter as the “bass” knob on a stereo or car audio system.
Because boosting bass adds energy to the signal, loud passages can exceed the digital ceiling and clip. Convertio automatically applies a brick-wall limiter after the bass filter to prevent distortion while preserving dynamics.
The processing chain: your audio → bass shelf filter (100 Hz, +X dB) → limiter (ceiling at −0.5 dBFS) → MP3 encoding. The result sounds naturally enhanced without the crackling artifacts of uncontrolled clipping.
Bass Boost Settings Guide
| Level | Gain | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Off | 0 dB | Original audio, no enhancement |
| Subtle | +3 dB | Gentle warmth for headphone listening |
| Moderate | +6 dB | Good for earbuds and laptop speakers |
| Strong | +10 dB | Car audio, gym playlists, Bluetooth speakers |
| Heavy | +15 dB | Powerful bass for EDM, hip-hop, trap |
| Extreme | +20 dB | Maximum impact, meme-level bass, subwoofer testing |
M4A Bass Boost: iPhone and iTunes Audio
M4A files from the Apple ecosystem often sound thinner than expected because iPhone microphones prioritize speech clarity over bass response. The mic capsules are optimized for the 1–4 kHz range where human speech is most intelligible, which means low-frequency content below 200 Hz is naturally attenuated.
iTunes and Apple Music files encoded as 256 kbps AAC preserve good bass quality, but playback on earbuds or laptop speakers can still sound bass-light. A +6 dB boost compensates for the physical limitations of small speakers without over-processing.
For Voice Memos: +3 to +6 dB adds warmth to speech without muddiness. For iTunes music played in the car: +8 to +10 dB compensates for road noise masking bass frequencies.