ooo ok, i thought u said there was NO way to mute the subs, im clear now... thanks
Zach
Yes. You must use an external amplifier to power your front and rear speakers.one question though, if it doesnt have a built in amplifier does that mean i have to amp my front and rear speakers???
On the 8053 you can adjust the attenuation all the way down to infinite attenuation...which is essentially muted.the only thing i don't like about them (I never used the 8053, but have used the 8443) is that you can't mute sub.
hmmm, i guess i should have looked into that before, i have an extra amp, but that might be more trouble than its worth to run another amp
lol i guess so //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/crap.gif.7f4dd41e3e9b23fbd170a1ee6f65cecc.gifYeah...would have been wise //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif
How much did you pay for the 8053?
I wouldn't call that a *great* deal....that's about what they are going for right now. Average is about $275-$300 for one in good condition.$280, so i still got a good deal, maybe i can make a little money and get another deck instead
Zach
If your power wire is adequately sized, you can just use a distrobution block to split your current power wire to both amps. You could also just splice off of your current REM wire to the new amp aswell. Only "new" wires you'll need to run are the RCA wires to the amp for the highs, aswell as a ground wire for the new amp.do i have to run a whole nother power wire, etc.??
You just have to go back to normal mode to adjust the sub. I had one of those decks(excellent as was every other eclipse I ever owned). Adjusting the sub volume really only took about 10 seconds...no big deal, imo.so it makes it harder to adjust the sub in pro mode??