4V preamp: worth it?

Like I said, I've never noticed a difference using 2v or 4v pre outs.
And by difference, I mean a difference in sound
It depends on the noise in your system. If there's no noise at 2v you won't be getting any benefits, however most setups have at least some noise and higher voltage preouts help to eliminate some of it.

 
It depends on the noise in your system. If there's no noise at 2v you won't be getting any benefits, however most setups have at least some noise and higher voltage preouts help to eliminate some of it.
There would probably be difference going from say a 2v Dual deck to a 4v Pioneer or Alpine lol

But going from a 2v Pioneer deck to 4v Pioneer, I didn't notice any difference.

 
There would probably be difference going from say a 2v Dual deck to a 4v Pioneer or Alpine lol
But going from a 2v Pioneer deck to 4v Pioneer, I didn't notice any difference.
Right for the most part. 2v to 5v for me wasn't a huge difference and I doubt most people would hear it but I could hear a little less noise. And I hate noise so that's a pretty big deal to me lol.

But if you do go with the 2v preouts and have noise issues, you can just use a line driver near the head unit to up the preout voltage before any noise is introduced to the signal.

 
You definitely want the 4V preouts. Without enough preout voltage, you really have to crank the gain on your amp up. It's hard to explain, but it seems like you get a lot more output with higher voltage preouts, even with the amps set the same with a DMM..[snip]
Nonsense. Output power is output power.

Higher voltage preouts = lower gain setting on amp
Lower gain on amp = less signal noise/distortion because it isn't amplified as much
This is a common Myth/Legend/Fallacy. The gain control on an amp doesn't affect distortion... it just adjusts the signal level. If set correctly the distortion won't be any different. As for noise, if you have noise on your input signals you're gonna hear it regardless of the gain setting.

There are plenty of SQ systems out there with 2V preouts. This topic has been discussed MANY times here. The big difference is that 4V and 5V units tend to be higher in the product lineups and have other enhancements that actually do make a difference.

 
Nonsense. Output power is output power.


This is a common Myth/Legend/Fallacy. The gain control on an amp doesn't affect distortion... it just adjusts the signal level. If set correctly the distortion won't be any different. As for noise, if you have noise on your input signals you're gonna hear it regardless of the gain setting.

There are plenty of SQ systems out there with 2V preouts. This topic has been discussed MANY times here. The big difference is that 4V and 5V units tend to be higher in the product lineups and have other enhancements that actually do make a difference.
Sorry for disagreeing here but I have had much better luck with a line driver than most. The higher the gain is on an amp, the more amplified and the more signal distortion you will have. Having said that, it can affect distortion to some degree. I have to say the higher the voltage on any head unit being amplified equals less noise and less distortion (if any exist). You also have to take in effect that the stronger the signal, the more output your amp will put out because the signal is being amplified. I'm no expert but I've done my fair share of research and I strongly believe in signal strength.

 
4v is nice for noise in the system. Allows u to turn to turn down the gain if you have amps upfront. 2.5 is still high voltage and todays head units rarely get noise with a good ground. Go for the Pioneer with bt and add another amp for the front and new speaks upfront. ihave a new jbl 45x2 and 6.5 and 5.25 cheap.

 
Nonsense. Output power is output power.


This is a common Myth/Legend/Fallacy. The gain control on an amp doesn't affect distortion... it just adjusts the signal level. If set correctly the distortion won't be any different. As for noise, if you have noise on your input signals you're gonna hear it regardless of the gain setting.

There are plenty of SQ systems out there with 2V preouts. This topic has been discussed MANY times here. The big difference is that 4V and 5V units tend to be higher in the product lineups and have other enhancements that actually do make a difference.
Another argument without much evidence for either side. I've seen it described this way: a 2v or 4v preout will pick up the same amount of signal noise. But the 2v signal needs to be amplified (twice as much) as the 4v signal, so the noise is also amiplified. But like you mentioned, 4v source units are usually higher quality, so it could be either of the two (or a combination).

Also, you won't be reaching anywhere near 2v/4v until you're near the max output of your deck, which is probably clipped unless it's a higher end deck. Higher preout voltage gives you a little more headroom, letting you set your max volume lower when you set your gains

 
The question was, is it worth it? I'd say no it is not worth it for the op. Is it better, yes it is better.

To op just needs to decide for himself, BT versus better audio features and power from the HU's amp speaker output.

Which one is it going to be? A lot of good info was shared here already, while others keep debating about the voltage. If you put a silent track and play it with the gains set with a DDM for both 2 and 4 volts you will get slight less hiss with the 4 volts and other marginal benefits with the volume. I just did a listening test. I have an HU with 5 volts RCA s, old school noisy JBL multichannel amp, no noise in between tracks at all, Gains set with DDM, my volume at 15-18 with music is about all I can handle, and it goes to 50. I Put it on aux, no input turn it up to 40 before I hear noticeable audible noise, at max I hear hiss but it does not bother me or makes me turn it down.

Now for cars with external road noise, wind, outside noise etc, I'd say again it's not worth it but it is better. Will the noise be the same with a 2.5 volt RCA's? Maybe, maybe not? is it worth it? I know my volume would need to be at 35 plus instead of 12-14

 
you guys are high as hell...

ive noticed a huge hugh difference in going from a alpine 9856, to akenwood x994, 2v pre outs to 4 v preouts, was like night and day... then went to a 80prs and it was again, a huge improvement, now i have a RF 360.3 which i set it to put out 6.5v pre outs to my amps, and again.... a huge difference.

 
I agree, I would not buy anything below 4 volts, just a preference. I never tried a 2 volt HU in my set up to notice the difference and I'm sure it will be there.

Again with the op having a 1200 watt amp, the amp will not sweat having the gains higher with 2 volt RCA s assuming he wants BT over 4 volts RCAs, maybe we will never know or hear from him, just like 99% of threads asking for help.

 
Sorry for disagreeing here but I have had much better luck with a line driver than most. The higher the gain is on an amp, the more amplified and the more signal distortion you will have. Having said that, it can affect distortion to some degree. I have to say the higher the voltage on any head unit being amplified equals less noise and less distortion (if any exist). You also have to take in effect that the stronger the signal, the more output your amp will put out because the signal is being amplified. I'm no expert but I've done my fair share of research and I strongly believe in signal strength.
Bolded statements above are simply not true. But they're very common beliefs in car audio. There are also people who think that higher gain setting makes your amp 'work harder' and run hotter.

Another argument without much evidence for either side. I've seen it described this way: a 2v or 4v preout will pick up the same amount of signal noise. But the 2v signal needs to be amplified (twice as much) as the 4v signal, so the noise is also amiplified.
This is true. But for a typical install you'd never hear the difference. The noises we typically deal with are nasty things like engine ignition noises and alternator whine which are unacceptable at ANY level. Those things need to be addressed at the source.

The OP is inquiring about mid priced mass market HU models. My advice is don't make the choice just on preout voltage. If he was building an SQ comp vehicle my advice would be different. Note that a lot of Alpine's HU's still have 2V preouts.

Also, you won't be reaching anywhere near 2v/4v until you're near the max output of your deck, which is probably clipped unless it's a higher end deck. Higher preout voltage gives you a little more headroom, letting you set your max volume lower when you set your gains
The only issue I've ever had with low preouts is that with volume at 80% (unclipped), sub level at 80% (for headroom on the fly) and a -5dB source I couldn't reach full power on the amp even at full gain. Having 4V would help for that. So would having an amp that had more gain.

you guys are high as hell...
ive noticed a huge hugh difference in going from a alpine 9856, to akenwood x994, 2v pre outs to 4 v preouts, was like night and day... then went to a 80prs and it was again, a huge improvement, now i have a RF 360.3 which i set it to put out 6.5v pre outs to my amps, and again.... a huge difference.
As we've said, there are major differences in HU performance but it's not all about preout voltage.

 
Bolded statements above are simply not true. But they're very common beliefs in car audio. There are also people who think that higher gain setting makes your amp 'work harder' and run hotter.


This is true. But for a typical install you'd never hear the difference. The noises we typically deal with are nasty things like engine ignition noises and alternator whine which are unacceptable at ANY level. Those things need to be addressed at the source.

The OP is inquiring about mid priced mass market HU models. My advice is don't make the choice just on preout voltage. If he was building an SQ comp vehicle my advice would be different. Note that a lot of Alpine's HU's still have 2V preouts.

The only issue I've ever had with low preouts is that with volume at 80% (unclipped), sub level at 80% (for headroom on the fly) and a -5dB source I couldn't reach full power on the amp even at full gain. Having 4V would help for that. So would having an amp that had more gain.

As we've said, there are major differences in HU performance but it's not all about preout voltage.
Well if they are directly correlated then id say out put voltage has a decent amount to do with it, among other things..

 
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