I want to set the gains on my subwoofer amp so that it sounds right, but I did the method I've read everywhere about turning off EQ completely (loudness, bass boost, preset EQ curves) and putting the volume up 3/4, then testing the speaker terminals on the amp with a DMM while playing a 50hz test tone.
I did that and now it sounds like shit. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/eek.gif.771b7a90cf45cabdc554ff1121c21c4a.gif There's not enough bass!! I usually have the volume about 1/3 way up (20-22 out of 60) with the loudness on at the Mid setting (Off - Low - Mid - High), the subwoofer controller at full +6 (scale -6 to +6 with increments of 1) and the equalizer curve on "Powerful" (peaks at left and right, valley in the middle). It sounds great this way! The mids and highs are tamed while the bass kicks the seats. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/cool.gif.3bcaf8f141236c00f8044d07150e34f7.gif
Now, the reason I want to set my gains by DMM is because I don't want to damage anything and I can't tell if a subwoofer is clipping by simply "listening."
Should I try doing the DMM test and aiming for 31.6 V while the settings are at the settings I normally listen to (with volume maybe at 25 or something just to be safe)? Maybe another, better idea? Anything? thanks ahead
btw, i have the following:
HU: Pioneer Premier DEH-P740MP
Amp: Kenwood KAC-8103D (that i want putting out 500W @ 2ohms)
Sub: Alpine 10" 4ohm DVC Type-R
I did that and now it sounds like shit. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/eek.gif.771b7a90cf45cabdc554ff1121c21c4a.gif There's not enough bass!! I usually have the volume about 1/3 way up (20-22 out of 60) with the loudness on at the Mid setting (Off - Low - Mid - High), the subwoofer controller at full +6 (scale -6 to +6 with increments of 1) and the equalizer curve on "Powerful" (peaks at left and right, valley in the middle). It sounds great this way! The mids and highs are tamed while the bass kicks the seats. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/cool.gif.3bcaf8f141236c00f8044d07150e34f7.gif
Now, the reason I want to set my gains by DMM is because I don't want to damage anything and I can't tell if a subwoofer is clipping by simply "listening."
Should I try doing the DMM test and aiming for 31.6 V while the settings are at the settings I normally listen to (with volume maybe at 25 or something just to be safe)? Maybe another, better idea? Anything? thanks ahead
btw, i have the following:
HU: Pioneer Premier DEH-P740MP
Amp: Kenwood KAC-8103D (that i want putting out 500W @ 2ohms)
Sub: Alpine 10" 4ohm DVC Type-R
