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<blockquote data-quote="C1500martin" data-source="post: 8343142" data-attributes="member: 660515"><p>First you'll need to identify the signals at your factory amplifier. For a non-Bose system, you may have full range front and rear or in some instances you may have separate signals for tweeters and mids for front, full range for rear and sometimes a sub.</p><p></p><p>If you have separate factory signals for tweeters and mids in front, connect the tweeters to channel 1, the mids to channel 3 and the rear to channel 2. Sum channel 3 to main and leave channel 2 separate. On the output side, channel 1 is your front signal (summed from channel 1 and 3), channel 2 is your rear signal (remains separate) and channel 3 is your sub signal (using the front door woofer signal). Alternatively, If you have a factory sub and want to use that and are OK with losing F/R fade, then remove the rear signals, move the front doors to channel 2 (sum channel 2 to main), connect the sub signal to channel 3 (separate from main). Now channel 1 is front/rear (use a splitter or 2 channel mode on your amp) and channel 3 is sub.</p><p></p><p>If your factory signals are simply full range front/rear and no sub, then connect front to channel 1, rear to channel 2 and let the LC6i automatically create a sub signal for you on channel 3. Channel 3 uses a feature called AutoMode to look for signal; if there is no signal present on channel 3, it looks to channel 2 (your rear signal in this case). You'll end up with channel 1 for fronts, channel 2 for rears and channel 3 for sub.</p><p></p><p>thats from audiocontrol themselves.. i installed an lc6i 2 weeks ago and had a similar question. this is the thread</p><p></p><p><a href="http:////forums/wiring-electrical-installation-help/611553-lc6i-install-help.html" target="_blank">http://www.caraudio.com/forums/wiring-electrical-installation-help/611553-lc6i-install-help.html</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="C1500martin, post: 8343142, member: 660515"] First you'll need to identify the signals at your factory amplifier. For a non-Bose system, you may have full range front and rear or in some instances you may have separate signals for tweeters and mids for front, full range for rear and sometimes a sub. If you have separate factory signals for tweeters and mids in front, connect the tweeters to channel 1, the mids to channel 3 and the rear to channel 2. Sum channel 3 to main and leave channel 2 separate. On the output side, channel 1 is your front signal (summed from channel 1 and 3), channel 2 is your rear signal (remains separate) and channel 3 is your sub signal (using the front door woofer signal). Alternatively, If you have a factory sub and want to use that and are OK with losing F/R fade, then remove the rear signals, move the front doors to channel 2 (sum channel 2 to main), connect the sub signal to channel 3 (separate from main). Now channel 1 is front/rear (use a splitter or 2 channel mode on your amp) and channel 3 is sub. If your factory signals are simply full range front/rear and no sub, then connect front to channel 1, rear to channel 2 and let the LC6i automatically create a sub signal for you on channel 3. Channel 3 uses a feature called AutoMode to look for signal; if there is no signal present on channel 3, it looks to channel 2 (your rear signal in this case). You'll end up with channel 1 for fronts, channel 2 for rears and channel 3 for sub. thats from audiocontrol themselves.. i installed an lc6i 2 weeks ago and had a similar question. this is the thread [URL="http:////forums/wiring-electrical-installation-help/611553-lc6i-install-help.html"]http://www.caraudio.com/forums/wiring-electrical-installation-help/611553-lc6i-install-help.html[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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