silvrhand
Junior Member
I have the current setup, and need some help as different volumes the system sounds good but still feel like I have clipping going on.
- Pioneer NEX 4000 Head Unit
- JL Audio HD 900 amp
- Focal PS165V front component speakers
- Focal PS130 rear 5.25" speakers
- JL Audio 10W1v3 stealthbox for the corvette.
Now my question comes around how to tune the amp gain for the speakers, do you tune them for RMS or do you tune them to the max power? I was using my volmeter to measure the amperage based on the RMS rating of the speakers, but to do this I needed a constant signal, aka test tone.
I am not sure if the frequency of the tone makes a difference.
I set the volume to 75% on the radio and measure the amps coming off the outputs of the JL
- front speakers are 80w RMS = sqrt ( 80 * 4 ohms ) = 17.88 volts
- rear speakers are 60w RMS = sqrt ( 60 * 4 ohms ) = 15.49 volts
- rear sub is 300w RMS = sqrt ( 300 * 4 ohms ) = 34.64 volts
so based off what I've learned.. this is the above voltage I should see is this correct?
- Pioneer NEX 4000 Head Unit
- JL Audio HD 900 amp
- Focal PS165V front component speakers
- Focal PS130 rear 5.25" speakers
- JL Audio 10W1v3 stealthbox for the corvette.
Now my question comes around how to tune the amp gain for the speakers, do you tune them for RMS or do you tune them to the max power? I was using my volmeter to measure the amperage based on the RMS rating of the speakers, but to do this I needed a constant signal, aka test tone.
I am not sure if the frequency of the tone makes a difference.
I set the volume to 75% on the radio and measure the amps coming off the outputs of the JL
- front speakers are 80w RMS = sqrt ( 80 * 4 ohms ) = 17.88 volts
- rear speakers are 60w RMS = sqrt ( 60 * 4 ohms ) = 15.49 volts
- rear sub is 300w RMS = sqrt ( 300 * 4 ohms ) = 34.64 volts
so based off what I've learned.. this is the above voltage I should see is this correct?
