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Car Audio Equipment
Speakers
6x9 issue
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<blockquote data-quote="maylar" data-source="post: 8306539" data-attributes="member: 541144"><p>Disconnect your speakers. If these are the rear speakers then fade the HU to rear. Put a sine wave test tone CD in your deck, anywhere from 100 to 1000 Hz will do. Set the DMM to AC volts and connect the probes to your amp's output terminals. Turn the volume up a bit and watch for a reading. No need to go higher than 4 volts or so if you're just checking for good/bad. Both channels should read exactly the same.</p><p></p><p>But first I'd check the speaker terminals with the "ohms" function (disconnected from the amp). You aught to see like 3 - 4 ohms for most speakers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="maylar, post: 8306539, member: 541144"] Disconnect your speakers. If these are the rear speakers then fade the HU to rear. Put a sine wave test tone CD in your deck, anywhere from 100 to 1000 Hz will do. Set the DMM to AC volts and connect the probes to your amp's output terminals. Turn the volume up a bit and watch for a reading. No need to go higher than 4 volts or so if you're just checking for good/bad. Both channels should read exactly the same. But first I'd check the speaker terminals with the "ohms" function (disconnected from the amp). You aught to see like 3 - 4 ohms for most speakers. [/QUOTE]
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6x9 issue
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