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<blockquote data-quote="SmartAsss" data-source="post: 7235014" data-attributes="member: 629857"><p>You will never stop the voltage drop without a alt.. Professor of what?</p><p></p><p>Your voltage drop is because the alt cannot keep up, when your alternator cannot keep up, then you start drawing from the battery, the battery only keeps a charge of about 12-13v (fully charged), the alternator puts out 13.8v+ (only examples voltages vary for car to car) because it has to over come the charge of the battery in order to charge it.. so your alternator is fluctuating between the battery's resting charge and the alternators charging voltage when you overload the alt. therefore as long as you have this fluctuation you will always have voltage drop. make sense? this overloading causes the alternators rectifier diodes and voltage regulator to heat-up which eventually causes death of them.</p><p></p><p> also your gains are set to low with this method, music is not as intense as a -0db sinewave, so setting your amp by this method results in significantly lower output. a -10 or -14db sine would be closer to actual music.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SmartAsss, post: 7235014, member: 629857"] You will never stop the voltage drop without a alt.. Professor of what? Your voltage drop is because the alt cannot keep up, when your alternator cannot keep up, then you start drawing from the battery, the battery only keeps a charge of about 12-13v (fully charged), the alternator puts out 13.8v+ (only examples voltages vary for car to car) because it has to over come the charge of the battery in order to charge it.. so your alternator is fluctuating between the battery's resting charge and the alternators charging voltage when you overload the alt. therefore as long as you have this fluctuation you will always have voltage drop. make sense? this overloading causes the alternators rectifier diodes and voltage regulator to heat-up which eventually causes death of them. also your gains are set to low with this method, music is not as intense as a -0db sinewave, so setting your amp by this method results in significantly lower output. a -10 or -14db sine would be closer to actual music. [/QUOTE]
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