Colby
Junior Member
If i have a capacitor and i hook it to my bass amp do i need a fuse between the two?
y do you have a cap in the first place?Originally posted by Colby If i have a capacitor and i hook it to my bass amp do i need a fuse between the two?
Absolutely do NOT fuse between the capacitor and the amp itself. A fuse creates a voltage drop across its lead, something you are trying to avoid in the first place.Originally posted by Colby If i have a capacitor and i hook it to my bass amp do i need a fuse between the two?
My thoughts exactly. Plus, resistance and voltage drop are one in the same.Originally posted by evo2k3 what about the caps that have built in distrobution blocks? that goes into smaller wiring. Not to mention if he is within 12 inches like i know you say it should be.....a 4 guage wire over 12 inches will handle as much current as the 0 guage feedline over 15-20 feet.....seems to be some faults in your logic.
Fuse, fuseholder, terminals, crimps... all have restance. As jlaine has been trying to get across, even milliohms of resistance defeats the purpose of using a cap.Originally posted by n2audio Jlaine - I know nothing at all about caps, but I do know something about wiring and fusing.
What if the wire changes guage? Wouldn't it be appropriate to fuse at that point? And do you know the voltage drop across , say a 60A fuse? As a wild guess - maybe 0.01V - tops?
You mean the caps with added goodies, that make them even more worthless than they are?Originally posted by evo2k3 what about the caps that have built in distrobution blocks? that goes into smaller wiring. Not to mention if he is within 12 inches like i know you say it should be.....a 4 guage wire over 12 inches will handle as much current as the 0 guage feedline over 15-20 feet.....seems to be some faults in your logic.
Why would you be feeding the amp a 0 gauge primary lead in the first place.Originally posted by tex How are you supposed to cram the 0 guage wire into the amp without ever reducing it?
Hey, your sick of repeating yourself so stop!!(and the "I am god, **** me off" aditude is not apreciated) as i said before we had both stated out points....you brought in completly pointless observation that the goodies reduce the effectivness. Although i do not diagree, it has nothing to do with reducing wire size. I will ask how you propose to put your 0 gauge wire into the 4 gauge terminal on the amp? it obviously has to be reduced somehow, and if your with in 12" why does it matter if you reduce at the cap or in a sperate distrobution block? Dont make the agrument that the disto distributes better because there is no difference in the distribution wheather you run a 0 or 4 gauge out of the cap. Although the technical idea that maylar stated is completley correct, I will also disagree because I do no believe the milli-ohm resistance will have a noticable effect the output of your amplfiers (with in reason of cource, puting 12 million 1 milli-ohm resisters in the line will obviously have an effect).Originally posted by jlaine You mean the caps with added goodies, that make them even more worthless than they are?
Do you even GET the idea of a capacitor?
The POINT is to NEVER, I repeat, NEVER!!! Restrict it in any way or form. This includes FUSES, JUNCTIONS, TERMINALS, and ANY OTHER RESISTIVE SOURCE, INCLUDING digital displays!!!!!!! Pop quiz, open your amplifier case, check out the capacitors feeding the power supply, you see ANYTHING in their path source to the voltage rails for the amp? NO!!!!!!!!!
The fault is in YOUR logic, and I am getting tired of repeating myself for you! The REASON the 4ga will handle that amount of current is based upon current draw and average voltage drop. Drop voltage, create heat. Now tell me, why the HELL would you feed a cap with 0 gauge, then drop it to 4 to feed your amplifier, how bloody STUPID can you get? The highest current surge will happen AFTER the capacitor, for the feed to the amplifier, to put a smaller cable on it is about the same as running your head into a wall for an hour straight figuring you can walk through walls -- POINTLESS!!!!!
Read maylar's VERY EXCELLENT (thank you maylar!) response for added information, I'm really sick and tired of butting heads with you on subject matter that is common law to most educated car audio installers and techs.
long before....really....but resitance increases with distance, so again you have contradicted yourself because "The POINT is to NEVER, I repeat, NEVER!!! Restrict it in any way or form. This includes FUSES, JUNCTIONS, TERMINALS, and ANY OTHER RESISTIVE SOURCE"Originally posted by jlaine Why would you be feeding the amp a 0 gauge primary lead in the first place.
It should be reduced at a fused distro block long before it ever makes it to the amp primary.
If you are going to quote me, at least understand what you are quoting in the first place.Originally posted by evo2k3 long before....really....but resitance increases with distance, so again you have contradicted yourself because "The POINT is to NEVER, I repeat, NEVER!!! Restrict it in any way or form. This includes FUSES, JUNCTIONS, TERMINALS, and ANY OTHER RESISTIVE SOURCE"
please take the time to format another long response, I enjoy reading them //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif