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<blockquote data-quote="West" data-source="post: 7854327" data-attributes="member: 638770"><p>If you have 4 full range RCA lines take two channels (one left and one right) and use a y-splitter to gain the needed channels for your sub. Repeating this you can have as many RCA lines as you need. The bad part about doing this is you can have some loss every time you split the signal.</p><p></p><p>At the amplifier set your high pass filters and low pass filters to the range that works best for each speaker/sub.</p><p></p><p>I am not going to deny that replacing the deck is the best answer for this problem, but if you are short on cash there are workarounds.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="West, post: 7854327, member: 638770"] If you have 4 full range RCA lines take two channels (one left and one right) and use a y-splitter to gain the needed channels for your sub. Repeating this you can have as many RCA lines as you need. The bad part about doing this is you can have some loss every time you split the signal. At the amplifier set your high pass filters and low pass filters to the range that works best for each speaker/sub. I am not going to deny that replacing the deck is the best answer for this problem, but if you are short on cash there are workarounds. [/QUOTE]
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