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Rockville baby
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<blockquote data-quote="Lasherž" data-source="post: 8712544" data-attributes="member: 679555"><p>It's a much bigger issue when you have a redonkulous signal strength. The lc2i gives 9.5 and I kept it at around 7, but when I got a new amp I had to lower it to 4.5V The range listed is 150mV to 5V on the new one but you can only usually find that in the manual or sometimes printed near the gain knob. It's possible to fry an amp and definitely possible to damage speakers from clipping with the gain all the way down if your source is either high level or higher than any normal head unit gets. If you get an amplifier with high or low level inputs to the same RCAs then it usually means it's way broader range.</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://rockfordfosgate.com/products/details/r1200-1d/[/URL]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lasherž, post: 8712544, member: 679555"] It's a much bigger issue when you have a redonkulous signal strength. The lc2i gives 9.5 and I kept it at around 7, but when I got a new amp I had to lower it to 4.5V The range listed is 150mV to 5V on the new one but you can only usually find that in the manual or sometimes printed near the gain knob. It's possible to fry an amp and definitely possible to damage speakers from clipping with the gain all the way down if your source is either high level or higher than any normal head unit gets. If you get an amplifier with high or low level inputs to the same RCAs then it usually means it's way broader range. [URL unfurl="true"]https://rockfordfosgate.com/products/details/r1200-1d/[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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