I just realized it was my fuse that was blown. So I switched the fuse in my DMM and it blew again >=| So I went to RadioShack and got new fuses (For free, thankfully) and now I'm gunna go do it again...What voltage do you get after you set it by ear?
Signal ground from the deck is not ment to be rigged up to power ground.. this can even induce more noise in some cases...The wire around the RCA terminals is better than any ground loop isolator or protector.
The isolator/protectors will only cover up the problem ... the wire is re-grounding the RCA's; This is the source of the issue.
The reason the Pioneers develop the alternator whine is the HU has a "Picofuse" on the PCB for the ground on the RCA's. If the rca's are played with when the system has power, it is very easy to pop this fuse and wipe out the proper ground on the RCA. Grounding the shielding to the case is indeed a ghetto fix, but its a free one.Signal ground from the deck is not ment to be rigged up to power ground.. this can even induce more noise in some cases...
The problem with ground loop stems from the fact that many amps and decks have poor isoltation between signal ground and power ground... grounding the RCA can work, but IMO is a ghetto fix...
Turn your HU volume up to 55 or 60 ... Pioneers don't clip until 62/62.So I think there's something wrong with either my math or my DMM.
I replaced the fuse, unplugged all my speakers, put the 1K Hz Test tone on, turn to 47/62 volume and probe the right channel. At full gain it was only 32.44 Volts... My math says it's supposed to be 40 volts (For a JBL GTO75.4 II w/ 104x4 @ 4-ohms)
Turn your HU volume up to 55 or 60 ... Pioneers don't clip until 62/62.
From my understanding it's not a fuse for the RCA.. it's a fuse for the OP amps signal ground... and pioneers will ground loop anyway...The reason the Pioneers develop the alternator whine is the HU has a "Picofuse" on the PCB for the ground on the RCA's.
Could be; I'm not positive on the schematics //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gifFrom my understanding it's not a fuse for the RCA.. it's a fuse for the OP amps signal ground... and pioneers will ground loop anyway...
It will increase your RCA output voltage closer to its rating and should raise the output potential of the amp. I didn't have good luck at all with my volume lower than 50 when setting the gains.Will that give me the right voltage?
never had any problem with ground loops on my pioneer until i popped the pico, layed a wire across it(using the pico's weld points) and haven't had problems since. any noise i have ever seen from a pioneer hu's rca's is due to the picofuse breakingFrom my understanding it's not a fuse for the RCA.. it's a fuse for the OP amps signal ground... and pioneers will ground loop anyway...
It appears that way in the picture, but once you push the RCA's on, they're on there very tight. You also don't need to use as large a wire as I did, I just had it lying around.hey, ultimate157 it looks like there isnt much room for the rcas to "seat" on the connection. is the rca suppose to basically touch the wire as you slide it on, or is the wire suppose to wrap AROUND the actual rca shield when you put the rca on?
he is right man half those isolators are built like shit, i watched a buddy return 3 untell he got one that kinda worked when all you need is some scrap wire.The wire around the RCA terminals is better than any ground loop isolator or protector.
The isolator/protectors will only cover up the problem ... the wire is re-grounding the RCA's; This is the source of the issue.