
To adjust the Excelle audio system, press the SET button to enter the sound effect settings. BAS Bass Control: -7 to +7, TRE Treble, FAD Front/Rear Balance Control: F7 to R7, BAL Left/Right Balance Control: L7 to R7.

Adjusting the audio system in the Excelle is actually quite simple. I usually focus on two key settings: bass and treble. First, find the sound settings in the central control screen, which include options for bass, treble, front/rear balance, and left/right balance. I prefer setting the bass between +3 and +4 for fuller drum beats, and the treble between +2 and +3 to make vocals clearer. I adjust the front/rear balance slightly towards the front to concentrate the sound near the windshield, making navigation prompts easier to hear while driving. When playing songs via from my phone, I deliberately select tracks of different genres—like pop, rock, and instrumental—to fine-tune the settings while listening. For everyday driving, keeping the volume at about two-thirds is recommended, as higher levels may drown out important road sounds.

As someone who frequently drives long distances, I find that the audio tuning of the Excelle should pay special attention to comfort. I like to reset all parameters in the sound settings first, then open my frequently played playlist. Setting the bass to +3 is sufficient—too strong, and it can cause headaches on long drives. Treble at +2 maintains clarity. The key is to adjust the attenuation setting two notches forward, which reduces sound in the back seats and makes it clearer for the driver. When encountering loud tire noise on highways, I slightly boost the midrange in the equalizer to ensure vocals aren't drowned out by the noise. When connected via Bluetooth, the phone volume should be set above 80%; otherwise, the car's audio output lacks sufficient power. Every month, I use Tsai Chin's "Ferry" to test the low-frequency effects and make fine adjustments accordingly.

After entering the sound settings interface, I mainly adjust these four parameters: set bass to around +4 to make drum beats more solid; increase treble by +3 for better detail clarity; keep the balance slider centered to avoid left-right bias; move the fade setting one notch forward. Different music genres require different settings: keep defaults for pop songs like Jay Chou's works, increase treble for classical music, and boost bass for rock music. The multifunction buttons on the right side of the steering wheel allow quick volume adjustment while driving, which is super convenient. It's best to reboot the infotainment system monthly to prevent sound setting malfunctions.

My tuning experience starts with addressing the front-rear sound imbalance. Enter the settings menu and focus on the attenuation function – I recommend moving the white slider forward by one notch to slightly reduce rear sound output and concentrate the front soundstage. Next, boost bass by +3 (exceeding +5 may introduce distortion) and treble by +2. When using the built-in music player, disable virtual surround sound as tests show it degrades clarity without meaningful quality improvement. users must disable all sound enhancements in their mobile music apps to avoid dual-processing distortion. Before saving settings, always test with songs across different frequency ranges: Adele's "Hello" works well for mid-high frequencies, while drum-heavy tracks best evaluate bass performance.

The key to tuning the Yinglang audio system lies in layered processing. For basic settings, I recommend boosting the bass by +3 to +4 for enhanced thickness, and increasing the treble by +2 to ensure clarity. For advanced tuning, differentiate between audio sources: when playing lossless music via USB, enable the high-fidelity mode in the vehicle's settings; when using , turn off all phone sound effects to avoid interference. Focus on solving common issues: if speech navigation is hard to hear, boost the midrange by 2 notches; if the rear seats can't hear clearly, move the attenuation slider forward; for muddy bass, adjusting attenuation is more effective than reducing bass. When testing, avoid default demo tracks—use songs you frequently listen to for the most accurate tuning. Regularly cleaning dust from the door speaker grilles can make the treble brighter.


