I do know what I'm talking about and no, that's not from voltage drop. It's from ripple. Also, a voltage drop generally does not cause more current draw. It causes a power drop. Yes, it is technically possible to put in circuitry to try and compensate for a voltage drop by raising the current, but you must understand all of the reasons that voltage drop happens. A stock alternator is going to run out of current to supply before the 4 gauge wire is saturated. And a lead acid battery doesn't react to load changes instantaneously and also, the internal resistance of a lead acid battery gets to be significant with significant loads. What you get as a result is a voltage drop. Yes, the wire is also going to drop some voltage, but you're not looking at the big picture here.and dragonrage... if you dont know what your talking about please do not post.
running too small of a power wire will cause the voltage the amp is getting to drop. which will cause it to draw more amperage which causes heat. heat which will cook the amp long with the power wire. i take it you have never been at a show where someone tried to get that last burp out of their batts and the amps went up in smoke? that is from voltage drop.
so your saying when their volt meter is reading 11v before they burp it and it drops to 8.9 when he hits it and the amps go up in smoke thats from voltage ripple?I do know what I'm talking about and no, that's not from voltage drop. It's from ripple.
First of all, I don't owe you any kind of explanation, so don't get cocky. I'll give you a very basic one anyway even though you're not going to appreciate the effort.so your saying when their volt meter is reading 11v before they burp it and it drops to 8.9 when he hits it and the amps go up in smoke thats from voltage ripple?
i await you tying to explain this one.
test tones are not useless. there is a reason they are used in competition vehicles. and the example i was talking about had no source of ac power. it was in the competition lanes with the vehicle off. so thats not ripple. the amps were being supplied with dc voltage from the battery bank.First of all, I don't owe you any kind of explanation, so don't get cocky. I'll give you a very basic one anyway even though you're not going to appreciate the effort.
The voltage may drop to 8.9, but it is not going to be DC power supplied. Even if we're talking about test tones here - which I believe are completely useless for any purpose other than measuring your system to tune your equalizer/crossover - the ability of the car to supply power is going to vary. Alternators do not make DC power. They make AC power which is then rectified. The car battery and any capacitors - including those in the amp - are left to smooth out the waveform. (Also, the nature of the switching power supply in most amps can help with this.) The higher the load, the harder the job on those components is. Both capacitors and batteries can blow from excessive ripple current.
P.S. English - learn it.
I stated that a 4ga wire will not burn at 1800w. Nothing more. And I still suggested 2ga over it. You're the one who decided to call me out based on... well, I'm not really sure.
Reading: learn it.
so you never said what i just quoted?No, it won't damage the amp's power supply, but it could burn that wire up. Could even start a fire. Not SUPER likely, but possible. My recommendation is 2 gauge.
A power supply won't be damaged by too high a source resistance.
who said anything about being louder. not really sure why or getting your feathers ruffled over people who do spl. this has nothing to do with that. its simply about the basics of car audio and the electrical systems needed to back them.About the test tones comment, perhaps you haven't noticed, but I'm purely interested in SQ. You SPL-types can take your childish competitions and, well, do them somewhere that isn't near me. And yes, your car is louder than mine, so don't bother trying that one on me, because I don't really care. NOBODY needs 5kW of bass in a car.