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#1
Posted to rec.audio.car
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My amp clipping led goes on on bass sections - can I avoid it withoutturning the volume down?
Hello all,
I've found this newsgroup on google search so I'm posting a question here. I've recently connected an amplifier to my car's front speakers and although it pushed the clipping threshold higher (louder) I was hoping still something could be made about it. I've bought a pair of Infinity 16 cm speakers (60W RMS each) and connected it to some JVC head unit. The head unit produces 19W RMS power on each channel, and some distortion appeared heard at volume 30 (of 50) . So after digging through Internet resources I've learnt that most probably my speaker is underpowered and the distortion is actually generated by the head unit itself. I've bought an old second hand ampliflier - dual channel Legacy branded - which is supposed to produce 2x100W of RMS power. I've connected everything and although it is working and the sound is louder, if I set my balance to more bass the clipping LED blinks with each bass kick. At the same time distortion is heard in the speaker. So I started wondering - is there actually a way of pushing the head unit volume close to it's peak without any distortions? Or what can I do? I look forward to your replies and in the meantime I'll keep driggin through wikipedia and different forums. Regards, Morris |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.car
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My amp clipping led goes on on bass sections - can I avoid it withoutturning the volume down?
In article , Morris wrote:
Hello all, I've found this newsgroup on google search so I'm posting a question here. I've recently connected an amplifier to my car's front speakers and although it pushed the clipping threshold higher (louder) I was hoping still something could be made about it. I've bought a pair of Infinity 16 cm speakers (60W RMS each) and connected it to some JVC head unit. The head unit produces 19W RMS power on each channel, and some distortion appeared heard at volume 30 (of 50) . So after digging through Internet resources I've learnt that most probably my speaker is underpowered and the distortion is actually generated by the head unit itself. I've bought an old second hand ampliflier - dual channel Legacy branded - which is supposed to produce 2x100W of RMS power. I've connected everything and although it is working and the sound is louder, if I set my balance to more bass the clipping LED blinks with each bass kick. At the same time distortion is heard in the speaker. So I started wondering - is there actually a way of pushing the head unit volume close to it's peak without any distortions? Or what can I do? I look forward to your replies and in the meantime I'll keep driggin through wikipedia and different forums. With HU alone the distortion is probably the HU but its not entirely clear. The volume control is just a attenuator and does not indicate where clipping will occur. Its possible the "Legacy" only puts out 2X50 watts, so the power increase is minimal. The only way to be sure is get another amp with good specs and more power and see how that acts. Going from 19W to 50 watts is barely noticable. Up to 100 watts should be very noticable but not even twice as loud. You need 10 times the power to play twice as loud, but more power enables you to help avoid clipping. greg |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.car
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My amp clipping led goes on on bass sections - can I avoid itwithout turning the volume down?
On 12 Mar, 16:04, (GregS) wrote:
In article , Morris wrote: Hello all, I've found this newsgroup on google search so I'm posting a question here. I've recently connected an amplifier to my car's front speakers and although it pushed the clipping threshold higher (louder) I was hoping still something could be made about it. I've bought a pair of Infinity 16 cm speakers (60W RMS each) and connected it to some JVC head unit. The head unit produces 19W RMS power on each channel, and some distortion appeared heard at volume 30 (of 50) . So after digging through Internet resources I've learnt that most probably my speaker is underpowered and the distortion is actually generated by the head unit itself. I've bought an old second hand ampliflier - dual channel Legacy branded - which is supposed to produce 2x100W of RMS power. I've connected everything and although it is working and the sound is louder, if I set my balance to more bass the clipping LED blinks with each bass kick. At the same time distortion is heard in the speaker. So I started wondering - is there actually a way of pushing the head unit volume close to it's peak without any distortions? Or what can I do? I look forward to your replies and in the meantime I'll keep driggin through wikipedia and different forums. With HU alone the distortion is probably the HU but its not entirely clear. The volume control is just a attenuator and does not indicate where clipping will occur. Its possible the "Legacy" only puts out 2X50 watts, so the power increase is minimal. The only way to be sure is get another amp with good specs and more power and see how that acts. Going from 19W to 50 watts is barely noticable. Up to 100 watts should be very noticable but not even twice as loud. You need 10 times the power to play twice as loud, but more power enables you to help avoid clipping. greg- Hide quoted text - Would it be safe to power a 60W speaker with a 200W amp channel provided the signal isn't clipped? Thanks, Morris |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.car
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My amp clipping led goes on on bass sections - can I avoid itwithout turning the volume down?
On 12 Mar, 16:04, (GregS) wrote:
In article , Morris wrote: Hello all, I've found this newsgroup on google search so I'm posting a question here. I've recently connected an amplifier to my car's front speakers and although it pushed the clipping threshold higher (louder) I was hoping still something could be made about it. I've bought a pair of Infinity 16 cm speakers (60W RMS each) and connected it to some JVC head unit. The head unit produces 19W RMS power on each channel, and some distortion appeared heard at volume 30 (of 50) . So after digging through Internet resources I've learnt that most probably my speaker is underpowered and the distortion is actually generated by the head unit itself. I've bought an old second hand ampliflier - dual channel Legacy branded - which is supposed to produce 2x100W of RMS power. I've connected everything and although it is working and the sound is louder, if I set my balance to more bass the clipping LED blinks with each bass kick. At the same time distortion is heard in the speaker. So I started wondering - is there actually a way of pushing the head unit volume close to it's peak without any distortions? Or what can I do? I look forward to your replies and in the meantime I'll keep driggin through wikipedia and different forums. With HU alone the distortion is probably the HU but its not entirely clear. The volume control is just a attenuator and does not indicate where clipping will occur. Its possible the "Legacy" only puts out 2X50 watts, so the power increase is minimal. The only way to be sure is get another amp with good specs and more power and see how that acts. Going from 19W to 50 watts is barely noticable. Up to 100 watts should be very noticable but not even twice as loud. You need 10 times the power to play twice as loud, but more power enables you to help avoid clipping. greg- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ok - that's what I'm gonna do next then - I've just purchased another second hand amp - this time it being the Audiobahn A4002T or something like that, I've read quite a number reviews where people were praising it. It's supposed to output the same wattage - 2x100 RMS at 4 Ohms and I will check how it sounds soon. Also another question appeared. At the moment my car is pretty messed up - the speaker lies on the floor and the amp sits on the passenger seat. I've only got one speaker hooked up to the amp (with a thick wire speaker), the other one is connected straight to the HU using original speaker wire. Now what will happen is - at certain volume if I put balance only on the amped speaker - the clipping LED is off - now if I move balance do play equally on both speakers without adjusting the volume, again the LED will kick in every now an then (in line with the bass kicks) Is that okay? Also - maybe someone did it before and instead of me checking different configurations for front speakers there is a certain configuration proved to work? Front speakers I'm using are Infinity 6012i The Headunit is JVC KD-PDR31 ANd why did I at all thought of adding an amplifier to the system? Cause I've replaced the original speakers with Infinity ones, as they were knackered and had one or two holes, at the same tim bought a new HeadUnit as the old one didn't have CD functionality. And after realising that distortion heard at the speakers at certain volume most probably originates from underpowering them - I decided to add an amp as I haven't got rear speakers and haven't really made up my mind if I want to have them as all the forum say to avoid mounting them on a rear shelf. And since I've added an amp with the 'clipping' LED I understood that it's definitely not the speaker's distortion, but the signal comes distorted, so hopefully if the signal was OK the speaker would play it clearly. So am I going the right way or did I miss something and could the reason be somewhere else? Thanks, Morris |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.car
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My amp clipping led goes on on bass sections - can I avoid it withoutturning the volume down?
Turn the gains down. They're not volume knobs. -- Adcom ------------------------------------------------------------------------ View thread: http://www.caraudioforum.com/showthread.php?t=297151 CarAudioForum.com - Usenet Gateway w/over TWO million posts online! |
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