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Amplifiers
No bass with new Taramps MD.1800
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<blockquote data-quote="Jeffdachef" data-source="post: 8685885" data-attributes="member: 650438"><p>Just get the replacement and pop it in. Theres DOA cases amps in any brand you can think of even the high end brands. Quality control is not <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="💯" title="💯" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f4af.png" /> in anything car audio. Do you have any other amp you can toss in to test? Give it an actual shot before losing all faith at the first sign of trouble. Once you see the actual power you can come back to the shop and laugh in their face.</p><p>They dont really sound like they know what they are doing if they say theres a 12 volt signal going to the speakers. Your car would have burned down by now. </p><p></p><p>You should do the testing yourself. A multi meter is crucial for cars and home diagnosis and repair and its 15 bucks at home depot. Set it to ohms and measure impedance. Set it to AC volts to measure signal out of the speaker leads of the amp. Because if you dont know how to troubleshoot, lets say you bought a totally different amp and the same **** happens. Now you are **** outta luck and have no clue in the same situation but you wasted a lot of money</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jeffdachef, post: 8685885, member: 650438"] Just get the replacement and pop it in. Theres DOA cases amps in any brand you can think of even the high end brands. Quality control is not 💯 in anything car audio. Do you have any other amp you can toss in to test? Give it an actual shot before losing all faith at the first sign of trouble. Once you see the actual power you can come back to the shop and laugh in their face. They dont really sound like they know what they are doing if they say theres a 12 volt signal going to the speakers. Your car would have burned down by now. You should do the testing yourself. A multi meter is crucial for cars and home diagnosis and repair and its 15 bucks at home depot. Set it to ohms and measure impedance. Set it to AC volts to measure signal out of the speaker leads of the amp. Because if you dont know how to troubleshoot, lets say you bought a totally different amp and the same **** happens. Now you are **** outta luck and have no clue in the same situation but you wasted a lot of money [/QUOTE]
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Car Audio Equipment
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No bass with new Taramps MD.1800
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