amp cutting off

what is the ohm load at the amp?if its lower than the amp is capable of handling then it will go into protect if you try to push any power through it.you may have to wire your speakers in series or a combonation of parael series to get the proper ohm load.or buy a new amp that will work if you plan on running multiple speakers i would suggest getting an high current amp that can handle low ohm loads with no problem.an the lower you go the more power you get to a point.good luck

 
I have a RF450.4 with 4 6x9's and 2 4x6's and 4 tweeters running from it. explain that ohms stuff you were talking about.
that could be your problem.....you may have the amp running at too low of an impedence. You have 10 presumably 4 ohm speakers running off a 4 channel amp .

 
Do you have two sets of component speakers? Or do you have 4 coaxials and 4 tweeters? How are all your speakers wired to the amp?

The amp is most likely cutting out because it is going into thermal protection. You are not supposed to play with the gain knob like a volume knob. Do a search for a gain setting tutorial.

 
I have the 4x6's and the 4 tweeters running to the front channel and the tweeters are wired to the 4x6's on each side and they are bridged. 6x9's are ran wired seperat to the reat channel and they are bridged. is this my problem?

 
I have the 4x6's and the 4 tweeters running to the front channel and the tweeters are wired to the 4x6's on each side and they are bridged. 6x9's are ran wired seperat to the reat channel and they are bridged. is this my problem?
You owe me a couple hundred brain cells. I lost them trying to understand what you mean. Please draw a diagram because what you said makes no sense whatsoever. Look up the terms series, parallel, and bridged. Learn what they mean and use them to describe your setup. Thanks.

But first...are you saying you hooked separate tweeters up to your 4x6 speakers in a parallel configuration? Do you have capacitors on them to block out the low frequencies? Or do you just mean you have 3-way 4x6 speakers in the front of your car?

Ow.

 
From the sound of things you hooked everything up in parallel on the rears. IE. you have a bunch of speakers + terminals wired to one + terminal on the amp, and a bunch of the - terminals wired to the other - on the amp. This presents a very low impedance (low ohms) to the amp which is bad for it.

In the fronts, if your tweeters are wired to the 4x6's speaker terminals then you'll have the same frequencies going to the tweeters as you do your 4x6's unless you have a crossover between the 4x6's and the tweeters. This is very bad for tweeters. You still won't hear low tones from the tweeter because they are incapable of producing them. Do you have any crossovers / high pass filters anywhere? Or are you talking about the tweeters built into the 4x6's?

 
ok here it goes. wires from 2 tweeters runs to left 4x6 terminal in turn runs to the amp. wires from 2 tweeters runs to right 4x6 terminal which in turn runs to amp where I have left and right wires bridged in speaker input.

 
Activity
No one is currently typing a reply...
Old Thread: Please note, there have been no replies in this thread for over 3 years!
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant.
Perhaps it would be better to start a new thread instead.

About this thread

bigchevyboy

10+ year member
Member
Thread starter
bigchevyboy
Joined
Location
richtown va
Start date
Participants
Who Replied
Replies
20
Views
1,609
Last reply date
Last reply from
XanderMoser
1778578257023.png

Glen Rodgers

    May 12, 2026
  • 0
  • 0
Screenshot_20260511_212804_Amazon Shopping.jpg

Blackout67

    May 11, 2026
  • 0
  • 0

New threads

Top