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Distortion please help!
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<blockquote data-quote="Dafaseles" data-source="post: 8754129" data-attributes="member: 681482"><p>It really could be anything except the amplifier (you tried 2 different amplifiers) or the speaker (you switched it) or the mounting surface (you played the speaker free air) </p><p>If you hook that speaker back up to the aftermarket amplifier (the pioneer correct?) Then, instead of using your head unit to control the music coming into it, if you can get a hold of some RCA's that you can input into your phone (RCA to headphone jack or RCA to whatever the iPhone jack is called) you can hook your phone (or any other mobile music device) strait into the amplifier and see if the problem goes away. Then you know it could be the LOC or the RCU. It's just troubleshooting basically to narrow down and find where the problem is coming from before you start spending money just blindly replacing things</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dafaseles, post: 8754129, member: 681482"] It really could be anything except the amplifier (you tried 2 different amplifiers) or the speaker (you switched it) or the mounting surface (you played the speaker free air) If you hook that speaker back up to the aftermarket amplifier (the pioneer correct?) Then, instead of using your head unit to control the music coming into it, if you can get a hold of some RCA's that you can input into your phone (RCA to headphone jack or RCA to whatever the iPhone jack is called) you can hook your phone (or any other mobile music device) strait into the amplifier and see if the problem goes away. Then you know it could be the LOC or the RCU. It's just troubleshooting basically to narrow down and find where the problem is coming from before you start spending money just blindly replacing things [/QUOTE]
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