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Sound Issue with my Pioneer car stereo
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<blockquote data-quote="huberoy123" data-source="post: 8884069" data-attributes="member: 658561"><p>I had a similar issue and mines was caused by my fuse holders getting hot and melting, compromising the connection but not burning the fuse. I upgraded my power wire, and the problem was resolved. Also, I've read that this can be caused by an amp going into protection mode. Which in turn is caused by improperly set amp gains. The gain is not a volume knob, so find out what the output of your head unit is and match it on your amplifier. You can find it in the specs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="huberoy123, post: 8884069, member: 658561"] I had a similar issue and mines was caused by my fuse holders getting hot and melting, compromising the connection but not burning the fuse. I upgraded my power wire, and the problem was resolved. Also, I've read that this can be caused by an amp going into protection mode. Which in turn is caused by improperly set amp gains. The gain is not a volume knob, so find out what the output of your head unit is and match it on your amplifier. You can find it in the specs. [/QUOTE]
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Sound Issue with my Pioneer car stereo
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