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One speaker extremely lower than others
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<blockquote data-quote="Kingstroker" data-source="post: 7935514" data-attributes="member: 644892"><p>had the same problem.</p><p></p><p>1st swap bad speaker wire with one next to it. if other speaker sounds bad, it's not you speakers.</p><p></p><p>2nd swap rca's on amp front, rear, left, right if bad sound moves around it's not you amp, if it doesn't it's time to repair or replace</p><p></p><p>3rd on the back of your deck if you suspect your RR rca is bad move RF to RR position, if it sounds normal you've just isolated it to your RCA's</p><p></p><p>4th if suspected is RR swap with LR if LR sounds bad it is your head unit outputs</p><p></p><p>5th someone can probably tell you the right way to do it with a multimeter</p><p></p><p>If its worth repairing see Ray Rayfield of Lenear Power/Blues Audio.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kingstroker, post: 7935514, member: 644892"] had the same problem. 1st swap bad speaker wire with one next to it. if other speaker sounds bad, it's not you speakers. 2nd swap rca's on amp front, rear, left, right if bad sound moves around it's not you amp, if it doesn't it's time to repair or replace 3rd on the back of your deck if you suspect your RR rca is bad move RF to RR position, if it sounds normal you've just isolated it to your RCA's 4th if suspected is RR swap with LR if LR sounds bad it is your head unit outputs 5th someone can probably tell you the right way to do it with a multimeter If its worth repairing see Ray Rayfield of Lenear Power/Blues Audio. [/QUOTE]
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One speaker extremely lower than others
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