n00b need help with amp install please!!
Me and my buddy are installing an amp and sub into his tC. It's a Kenwood amp, model KAC7252. (Click here, link to amp info) He's connecting it to an 12" Alpine Type-R sub. The sub's voice coils are wired in series. We ran power from the battery, and grounded to one of the bolts that the baby seat ties downs use in the trunk. Signal is coming from a preamp output on his head unit, an Alpine CDA-9856. (Click here, link to head unit info)
Now the problem is, when we switch the head unit on, the amp has power. it powers the sub (faintly, barely audible) until we turn the volume up past 10, at which point the amp goes into protect mode. The cabin lights also dim a little. We've tried it with 3 amps and gotten the same effect every time. I know the cabin lights are a sign the he needs a cap, but why does the amp keep going into protect?HELP!!
Now the problem is, when we switch the head unit on, the amp has power. it powers the sub (faintly, barely audible) until we turn the volume up past 10, at which point the amp goes into protect mode. The cabin lights also dim a little. We've tried it with 3 amps and gotten the same effect every time. I know the cabin lights are a sign the he needs a cap, but why does the amp keep going into protect?HELP!!
Yes one sub, and we are bridging the amp correctly. We've checked and rechecked all the speaker connections, they are right. Do you know where we could be getting a short? We tried looking for one but came up with nothing.
Also try connecting another speaker (any speaker) to the amp and see if it still happens. Or else connect the sub (wired the same way) to another amp. Either test will ensure it's not the sub, as thus far it appears you only ruled out the amp being an issue.
Originally Posted by BeetC
...grounded to one of the bolts that the baby seat ties downs...
Find a new ground location. Upgrade the "big 3". Caps are overrated - don't get one. Crank it up!
OK so we're looking for a better ground, and also looking to use better materials for the ground. Also testing to see that the sub is working (which it should be, since it's brand new)
Thanks guys, I'll let you know how it turns out.
Thanks guys, I'll let you know how it turns out.
You mean you have it where that metal hook thing used to be, under the flipping cover? I have it there, pushing 1000 watts and using 4awg power wire. But, I sanded mine with a dremel tool. You haven't said if you did or not.
Originally Posted by Zebman
You mean you have it where that metal hook thing used to be, under the flipping cover? I have it there, pushing 1000 watts and using 4awg power wire. But, I sanded mine with a dremel tool. You haven't said if you did or not.
I would wire only one voice coil of the sub just to see if it goes into protect mode. Don't blast it, just see if it works...I had this problem once when the sub wasn't wired correctly. when you say they're wired in series, do you mean:
pos from amp to pos on coil #1, then negative of coil #1 to positive of coil #2, then neg from coil #2 to neg on amp?
That's how mine is wired and it sounds great...I tried other alternatives and never got the others to work...
pos from amp to pos on coil #1, then negative of coil #1 to positive of coil #2, then neg from coil #2 to neg on amp?
That's how mine is wired and it sounds great...I tried other alternatives and never got the others to work...
^ That's a good idea too. If they're wired in parallel instead of series, and if the load on the amp is too low, then it could exhibit the same symptoms as he described. Most amps can handle a lower than load than they're rated for at low volume, but will fail beyond a certain point.
Well, if the sub is a dual 2 ohm coil, you are fine for series wiring (total 4 ohms), but if its a dual 4 ohm coil, then you are running it at 8 ohms and not utilizing the full potential of the amp, wire it parallel for a total of 2 ohms . That is not the issue though as I will agree it sounds like a bad ground.





