you could get a 5v for 300$ mannnn on ebay(Kenwood MP828, very good head unit 5v with 4-band EQ with SRS WOW and many options for cheap price), i suggest you get the highest volt possible IMO, get the most you can... what head unit are you thinkin for 400$?SO....Yes or NO....4 volts $400 2 volts $200
But wouldn't an amp recieving 4v vs. 2v not have to have the gain turned up *as* high to be properly adjusted? Wouldn't it be less stress on the electrical system then? Wouldn't it be easier on the amp? I'm not trying to sound cocky if that is how it comes off, merely trying to learn. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif...and are not "louder" with a properly adjusted gain.
Yes, but the only possible thing you will gain there is a better SNR (signal to noise ratio). If you had no audible noise with a 2V signal, going to 4V will not gain you anything.But wouldn't an amp recieving 4v vs. 2v not have to have the gain turned up *as* high to be properly adjusted?
No. 1kw is 1kw, no way around it.Wouldn't it be less stress on the electrical system then?
Not really. The amplifier is still producing 1kw. The same amount of power is still flowing through the amplifier. Most amplifiers were designed to safely produce rated power output with as little as .2VWouldn't it be easier on the amp?
I don't know much about the Kenwood....but what features do you need in a HU? Which one of those decks has the features you need?I am trying to decide between the Alpine 9855, and the Kenwood 25th anniversary deck....But Kenwood makes many decks that are much less money, and they are 4 volt....I know I will get trashed for this, but I the amp I will be running is the Audiobahn A4801T....Before you trash it, look it up on a few sites and look at the info....Please help me decide what to do. Thank you.
common misconception. the input siganl from the RCA's is a control signal -- it provides insignifigant energy for the amp to actually do anything. with transistors it is easy to get a voltage gain of over 10,000. in fact that's how amps end up working. you build an amp with two inputs and a high gain. then hook it up so it "amplifies the difference of the inputs by a high gain". then you take the output from the amp and hook it up to the input. basically the output would never be more then 1/gain away from the input voltage.But wouldn't an amp recieving 4v vs. 2v not have to have the gain turned up *as* high to be properly adjusted? Wouldn't it be less stress on the electrical system then? Wouldn't it be easier on the amp? I'm not trying to sound cocky if that is how it comes off, merely trying to learn. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
Yes, it was likely just coincidence.I listened to several systems in friend's cars, and the one that was superior had a 5 volt HU....Maybe just coincidence,
I would personally go for that Alpine you mentioned, out of those two decks.So if you guys could point me in the right direction in simple terms, I would really appreciate it. Thank you