Hi Guys-
I recently picked up a Pioneer 10" TS-WX1010A Sealed enclosure active sub with built-in amp. I'm trying to install this into a 2007 Honda Accord. Stock speakers I believe, with aftermarket Dogen(chinese) Android touch screen. Again the display is already installed and working fine for awhile. I'm just trying to beef up the sound a bit. The sale price of the sub was to good as I'm not looking for competition winning sound.
So, the power connections seem straight forward as I bought the amp wiring kit. It's weird though because the harness the sub came with are about 16-18 gauge wires and the connection kit has 8 gauged wires. I'm going to have to solder that small wire into the bigger gauge, is that fine? Overkill seems like but none the less.
Also, am I supposed to just "tap" into the factory speaker wires with this type of amp? I guess the wiring is more mystery than any physical setup at this point. Getting wires routed from the front to the back (through firewall) is the easy part. It's the science behind the signals that confuse me.
I can provide pictures when I get home and I hope this explanation makes sense.
Thanks
I recently picked up a Pioneer 10" TS-WX1010A Sealed enclosure active sub with built-in amp. I'm trying to install this into a 2007 Honda Accord. Stock speakers I believe, with aftermarket Dogen(chinese) Android touch screen. Again the display is already installed and working fine for awhile. I'm just trying to beef up the sound a bit. The sale price of the sub was to good as I'm not looking for competition winning sound.
So, the power connections seem straight forward as I bought the amp wiring kit. It's weird though because the harness the sub came with are about 16-18 gauge wires and the connection kit has 8 gauged wires. I'm going to have to solder that small wire into the bigger gauge, is that fine? Overkill seems like but none the less.
Also, am I supposed to just "tap" into the factory speaker wires with this type of amp? I guess the wiring is more mystery than any physical setup at this point. Getting wires routed from the front to the back (through firewall) is the easy part. It's the science behind the signals that confuse me.
I can provide pictures when I get home and I hope this explanation makes sense.
Thanks
