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Any ideas?
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8724660" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>You may want to pull the amp out and connect it to something completely separate from the car. I don't think you're going to avoid that here. I think you need to do an equipment check before possibly the situation gets worse. Idk if your stuff is under warranty or not, but you may even open your amp up and anything you think is giving you a problem.</p><p></p><p>Before you do that, maybe, push on your door speakers. Like push cone down into the motor softly, and see if you hear any rubbing.</p><p></p><p>I have an issue where PAPER CONE speakers will slowly degrade over time if they get wet. So you may look at that. My explorer's roof was heavily modified. The sunroof was glued shut basically, and I took the water drainage gutter out that made the water drip into the A pillar to go to the ground outside. I had a very small leak on the right side of that sunroof, and just from the moisture being in the cab, it basically blew one of my rainbow 6.5's because it slowly dissolved the cone. And it would do what you're talking about, like clack around when the midbass hit. You may try setting your speaker amps high pass filter really high, like 250 hz if you can, and see if it still does it. That would be a good indicator that it's a speaker. The speakers have to move in an out way more on the low notes, and it'll rub and clack if it's blown.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8724660, member: 591582"] You may want to pull the amp out and connect it to something completely separate from the car. I don't think you're going to avoid that here. I think you need to do an equipment check before possibly the situation gets worse. Idk if your stuff is under warranty or not, but you may even open your amp up and anything you think is giving you a problem. Before you do that, maybe, push on your door speakers. Like push cone down into the motor softly, and see if you hear any rubbing. I have an issue where PAPER CONE speakers will slowly degrade over time if they get wet. So you may look at that. My explorer's roof was heavily modified. The sunroof was glued shut basically, and I took the water drainage gutter out that made the water drip into the A pillar to go to the ground outside. I had a very small leak on the right side of that sunroof, and just from the moisture being in the cab, it basically blew one of my rainbow 6.5's because it slowly dissolved the cone. And it would do what you're talking about, like clack around when the midbass hit. You may try setting your speaker amps high pass filter really high, like 250 hz if you can, and see if it still does it. That would be a good indicator that it's a speaker. The speakers have to move in an out way more on the low notes, and it'll rub and clack if it's blown. [/QUOTE]
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