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Wiring, Electrical & Installation
Double Din Speaker Wires Issue
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<blockquote data-quote="HardofWhoring" data-source="post: 8851997" data-attributes="member: 674149"><p>I didn't read the article, but with those GM Bose systems; either fix what needs fixing, or rip out the entire thing and start from scratch with aftermarket. After you start adding the adapters needed to do part of the system, you're spending money that would go towards better equipment. I know on the pickups and SUVs, those bose amps and speakers were also at some funky ohm rating and they wired em in series. It's something like 2.7 or 3 ohm speakers and a 6 or 8 ohm amp, that plays really low power. </p><p></p><p>GM was doing a lot of stupid things in the early 2000s to save a couple dollars and a few cents here and there, that they should have been slapped for. The accountants won a lot of decisions around this time frame and common sense lost out to saving a little money, because 90% of people wouldn't notice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HardofWhoring, post: 8851997, member: 674149"] I didn't read the article, but with those GM Bose systems; either fix what needs fixing, or rip out the entire thing and start from scratch with aftermarket. After you start adding the adapters needed to do part of the system, you're spending money that would go towards better equipment. I know on the pickups and SUVs, those bose amps and speakers were also at some funky ohm rating and they wired em in series. It's something like 2.7 or 3 ohm speakers and a 6 or 8 ohm amp, that plays really low power. GM was doing a lot of stupid things in the early 2000s to save a couple dollars and a few cents here and there, that they should have been slapped for. The accountants won a lot of decisions around this time frame and common sense lost out to saving a little money, because 90% of people wouldn't notice. [/QUOTE]
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Double Din Speaker Wires Issue
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