I have 2 L7 15's and a 2500 Watt Amp Kicker. Everytime I turn up my stereo or my bass knob, the amp and subs shut past its sell-by date and turn back on; again and again. I own a 0 gauge power telecommunication, 18 gauge speaker chain, and 4 gauge ground rope hooked up to the amp. I know i have a suitable connection to my ground chain. Is their somthing wrong with my electric wiring?? Or do i need a capacitor?? Can anybody relieve me with this problem??
Do you hold the two 15's wired in series or surrounded by parallel? This is very far-reaching! Having the speakers wired in the wrong configuration can cut their resistance surrounded by half, effectively doubling the wattage of your amp, and consequently its heat output, too. This can motivation the amp the thermally protect itself, tripping an internal switch and shutting itself off momentarily. A correct site to learn nearly speaker wiring, and the difference between series and parallel circuits is www.crutchfields.com. Check it out, you'll be suprised by how much you don't really know. I be!
you might be tripping the over current circuit, or the overheat circuit...
knotty to say lacking looking at it, but you might have your impedence too low...
Answers: The first problem you enjoy two different sizes of power wire. The ground AND power should be like size. The same amount of current flows through both.
Do you have the gain set right?
The purpose of the gain is to game the signal volts RMS coming from the source (CD player, etc.) to the input of the amp.
Here is a guide that will help you set the gain correctly http://www.datafilehost.com/download.php...
You'll inevitability a multi-meter (AC voltmeter), Microsoft Excel and a way to burn an audio compact disc from an MP3.
If you don't have Excel, e-mail me and I'll convey you a condensed version sparky3489(a)YAH00.com
Also too low of an impedance (ohms) on the amp can grounds this to happen.
See my site for more info http://spkrbox1.spaces.live.com
I enjoy the JVC KD-AVX11 within plunge...
Do you hold the two 15's wired in series or surrounded by parallel? This is very far-reaching! Having the speakers wired in the wrong configuration can cut their resistance surrounded by half, effectively doubling the wattage of your amp, and consequently its heat output, too. This can motivation the amp the thermally protect itself, tripping an internal switch and shutting itself off momentarily. A correct site to learn nearly speaker wiring, and the difference between series and parallel circuits is www.crutchfields.com. Check it out, you'll be suprised by how much you don't really know. I be!
What else do i stipulation wen addin...
you might be tripping the over current circuit, or the overheat circuit...
knotty to say lacking looking at it, but you might have your impedence too low...
Questions in the order of hooking up...
Answers: The first problem you enjoy two different sizes of power wire. The ground AND power should be like size. The same amount of current flows through both.
Do you have the gain set right?
The purpose of the gain is to game the signal volts RMS coming from the source (CD player, etc.) to the input of the amp.
Here is a guide that will help you set the gain correctly http://www.datafilehost.com/download.php...
You'll inevitability a multi-meter (AC voltmeter), Microsoft Excel and a way to burn an audio compact disc from an MP3.
If you don't have Excel, e-mail me and I'll convey you a condensed version sparky3489(a)YAH00.com
Also too low of an impedance (ohms) on the amp can grounds this to happen.
See my site for more info http://spkrbox1.spaces.live.com
Resolved Questions
- Which would be best ? HO alternator,...
- What sports car audio amplifier would suit...
- Amp and Radio?
- Car stereo suggestion please!?
- Kenwood subwoofers?
- My subs bass sounds odd.. anyone know?...
- Why does my car's disc player one...
- Amp kick on next go to protect?
- Memphis Subwoofers?
- Different Sub sizes whats the Differents?