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Wiring, Electrical & Installation
Series-parallel wiring and sub heat/smell
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<blockquote data-quote="hispls" data-source="post: 8767625" data-attributes="member: 614752"><p>Now try to define "music". Are we talking about Gene Autry's Greatest Hits? Michael Jackson's Thriller? The Wanamaker Organ Centennial Concert? Some 80IQ knuckle dragger grunting about his genitals and committing crime over a 40hz clipped sine wave? </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I could not find much details about those except some old forum posts, but I would suggest that if your subs are getting smelly, regardless of what you read anywhere or who told you what, you are putting heat into them faster than your woofers can shed that heat, there is literally no other explanation. Assuming you're not doing something terribly wrong in wiring the coils wrong or similar, the answer is going to boil down to either buy more robust woofers, or use some restraint on the volume knob and give things a rest for a bit after pushing hard like that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hispls, post: 8767625, member: 614752"] Now try to define "music". Are we talking about Gene Autry's Greatest Hits? Michael Jackson's Thriller? The Wanamaker Organ Centennial Concert? Some 80IQ knuckle dragger grunting about his genitals and committing crime over a 40hz clipped sine wave? I could not find much details about those except some old forum posts, but I would suggest that if your subs are getting smelly, regardless of what you read anywhere or who told you what, you are putting heat into them faster than your woofers can shed that heat, there is literally no other explanation. Assuming you're not doing something terribly wrong in wiring the coils wrong or similar, the answer is going to boil down to either buy more robust woofers, or use some restraint on the volume knob and give things a rest for a bit after pushing hard like that. [/QUOTE]
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Series-parallel wiring and sub heat/smell
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