moving your rca's has nothing to do with engine noise...the same power running through the power wire runs through the whole car as the ground//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gifi have a 7800 and did have a slight whine problem coming from the right channel all i did was re-route the rca's keeping them far apart from the power wire and i wrapped electrical tape around the connection and i have ZERO whine.
wrong! if your rca's are sitting next to a huge wire bundle or the power wire for your amp, whine can be inducted into them and if you move them away where they are by themselves this can often be cured.moving your rca's has nothing to do with engine noise...the same power running through the power wire runs through the whole car as the ground
i'd like actual verifiable proof of this. it's been a heated debate and it's a very split opinion.wrong! if your rca's are sitting next to a huge wire bundle or the power wire for your amp, whine can be inducted into them and if you move them away where they are by themselves this can often be cured.
The only fact I can provide is that initially in my car I ran the rca's under the center console next to a bunch of factory wiring and had lots of wierd whining and clicking going on, so I pulled the seats out and ran it under the center of the passenger side next to nothing and all the noises were gone. If passive crossovers are too close to say, the turn signal relay, you can get buzzing with the turn signals- I had that problem in my wife's Element, so to make a blanket statement that noise can't be inducted into the sound system by components or wiring being too close to other powered components or wiring is categorically wrong. Basic science tells us that when voltage is passed through a wire it can induce voltage in a wire next to it. These are my practical experiences and the reasons for my comment. Now you prove, with facts, that it doesn't matter where you run the rca's.i'd like actual verifiable proof of this. it's been a heated debate and it's a very split opinion.
please provide facts for your arguement. i really doubt that if you have somewhat decent shielded rca's you'll "induct" noise into your system because your rca's are too close to your power wire.
Use good, shielded RCAs and this shouldn't happen.The only fact I can provide is that initially in my car I ran the rca's under the center console next to a bunch of factory wiring and had lots of wierd whining and clicking going on, so I pulled the seats out and ran it under the center of the passenger side next to nothing and all the noises were gone. If passive crossovers are too close to say, the turn signal relay, you can get buzzing with the turn signals- I had that problem in my wife's Element, so to make a blanket statement that noise can't be inducted into the sound system by components or wiring being too close to other powered components or wiring is categorically wrong. Basic science tells us that when voltage is passed through a wire it can induce voltage in a wire next to it. These are my practical experiences and the reasons for my comment. Now you prove, with facts, that it doesn't matter where you run the rca's.
You have more patience than me.....I have the whine problem with my 960MP. Its not a bad grounding issue. The fuse blows inside the deck. I took it in to get repaired, but it blew again. Its back in the shop for that problem, plus numerous reasons. I dont want to get rid of the deck, because I love the 13 Band EQ.
Oh and grounding your RCA's will only minimize the whine. Never totally takes it away