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Cant get much output from amp/sub wired from hi-level input.
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<blockquote data-quote="bbeljefe" data-source="post: 8233504" data-attributes="member: 655960"><p>If you'll quote me in your response I will see a notification and that will make me aware of your response. ;-)</p><p></p><p>Out of phase would mean that positive and negative are reversed on one side and no, speaker wiring is not similar to power wiring. It's an AC signal and there is no permanent reference to ground.</p><p></p><p>And you mentioned that you swapped the wires around. All of them? Because if one side is out of phase and you reversed both sides, you're still out of phase. You only need to reverse one side, if that's not what you did.</p><p></p><p>If your head unit is crossing the output to high pass, adding a bass boosting device will do no good because there will be no bass to boost. You need to verify that there is no high pass filter activated on the head unit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bbeljefe, post: 8233504, member: 655960"] If you'll quote me in your response I will see a notification and that will make me aware of your response. ;-) Out of phase would mean that positive and negative are reversed on one side and no, speaker wiring is not similar to power wiring. It's an AC signal and there is no permanent reference to ground. And you mentioned that you swapped the wires around. All of them? Because if one side is out of phase and you reversed both sides, you're still out of phase. You only need to reverse one side, if that's not what you did. If your head unit is crossing the output to high pass, adding a bass boosting device will do no good because there will be no bass to boost. You need to verify that there is no high pass filter activated on the head unit. [/QUOTE]
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Cant get much output from amp/sub wired from hi-level input.
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