Hdc3 not hitting hard ?

if I put sub level all the way up on cd player that will not clip my signal ?
Don't listen to him man.

--

Get a DMM and a -3db 50hz test tone..

Hook the dmm up to your subwoofer's positive and negative to check your ohm load is 1ohm

Turn your headunit up to 3/4th the volume.

unplug the speaker wires to the sub and put the negative and positive of the dmm inside of the speaker terminals on the amp, set the DMM to AC volts and turn the gain up until you see 34volts.

 
Don't listen to him man.--

Get a DMM and a -3db 50hz test tone..

Hook the dmm up to your subwoofer's positive and negative to check your ohm load is 1ohm

Turn your headunit up to 3/4th the volume.

unplug the speaker wires to the sub and put the negative and positive of the dmm inside of the speaker terminals on the amp, set the DMM to AC volts and turn the gain up until you see 34volts.
ok sub level on HU at 0 ?

 
Try sub level all the way up in the deck and use the dd1 to check for clipping on the rca if no clipping is present up to about 5/8 to 3/4 volume then proceed to re gain set your amp.

I am almost willing to bet the sub level on the deck controld the preout voltage and isnt a bass boost function

comprendé

 
It depends how your gains are set in the first place. Clipping is the least of your worries and a bit of clipping on the input side can't hurt your stuff very easily nor will it be very audible. Clipping heavily on the input side however sounds like **** and if ran hard, then it will hurt your stuff. Clipping on the output side ONLY happens at high volume on the output side, and may or may not hurt your things, depending how clipped you are..

3rd time in 3 days I've had to post this, I about want to make a thread.. MINOR CLIPPING HURTS NOTHING! In fact you WANT to clip your stuff, if you want any output out of it. Most music, even rap has a 3-6db crest factor, rock can be as much as 12, really well recorded stuff, 20db or more crest factor. Crest factor is the difference between a sources max volume and it's average volume, when it's recorded. So even heavy rap is 6db quieter on the average than it is at big bass lines.. So if your amp NEVER clips, so just under clipping on the big points, it's putting out -6db worth of output on average, or 1/4 the power.. Your 1200 watt amp on "average" is only producing 400 watts.. That's why it's quiet. Minor clipping is mostly inaudible as the distortion it produces will be filtered out by the subwoofers natural inductance. Not only that, the coil can doens't see that much more power, since the higher order stuff is filtered. 3-6db of clipping wont' sound bad when it clips, won't break the sub and will make your sub produce around 2x the average power ,so you'll be getting 800ish watts on average, with peaks at 1200 clipping slightly and lesser peaks just being maxed out as normal..

If you don't have a tone, just use music. Turn your gains all the way down on everything. Put HU at 3/4 volume, sub level all the way up, in most cd player it's just another preamp gain that rarely clips... Play a song in the low 30's, white girl is a easy one most people have. Turn the gain up on the amp until the sub stops moving futher or sounds distorted. Once that happens back the gain down a bit.. Your not going to be clipping all to hell at that point and it should get loud.. The SMD is what's messing you up, just set the gain by ear and use common sense. When the gain knob stops producing more output STOP. Remember how loud that is and you'll know the limit of your equipment.

A -3 or -6db tone can do the same thing. Depends how much gain overlap you want, personally if I use tones it at least a -6 and I just watch my volume knob, loud tracks turn down a hair, quiet tracks I have plenty of room to turn it up.

 
Try sub level all the way up in the deck and use the dd1 to check for clipping on the rca if no clipping is present up to about 5/8 to 3/4 volume then proceed to re gain set your amp.
I am almost willing to bet the sub level on the deck controld the preout voltage and isnt a bass boost function

comprendé
I think its a preout to cause I can set it to OFF and my sub stop playing

 
[quote name='greenpat01']OK did it like 5 min ago ... ****.. now its look like 1200 rms ahhaha thanks guys[/QUOTE]

I think that Means @\-BenBen\- ; For the Win..Kiss my *** Loosers
 
[quote name='-BenBen-']I think that Means @\-BenBen\- ; For the Win..Kiss my *** Loosers[/QUOTE]

It depends on the head unit. Pioneer units you leave the sub output at 0 and that is nominal output. Kenwood for example, 0 actually means no output, while 15 is full. I know on my Pioneer I never ever ever set my sub output above 0. It just depends on the head unit, so stop with the trash-talking.

I seee that you @ben, have a pioneer head unit. do not turn the sub output all the way up. That will almost definitely clip the signal in one way or another.
 
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