Posted October 29, 201212 yr Running a 10" JL (300 RMS) on an Alpine amp at 150 RMS at 4 ohms and I just fried it. Same happened to my last 10" Punch. I thought i had the sub matched perfectly to my amp but obviously I am doing something wrong. Anyone know of any good instructional material I can read to educate myself before I waste any more money? I wanted to upgrade my sub and amp but not if I am going to just ruin another driver. I do listen with the bass boost up and at high volume, I am definitely hard on my subs, but thats why I was careful not to over power this one. What else could I be doing wrong? HELP!
October 29, 201212 yr Did you have your gain cranked all the way up? The bass boost could've contributed to it also, most likely your subs could've been getting dirty power
October 29, 201212 yr I do listen with the bass boost up.... am definitely hard on my subs,^That is part of it. How did you set your gain?
October 29, 201212 yr Author I turned the boost and everything off, turned the volume to where my speakers started to distort and backed off a little then turned the gain till my sub started to distort then backed off a little
October 29, 201212 yr I turned the boost and everything off, turned the volume to where my speakers started to distort and backed off a little then turned the gain till my sub started to distort then backed off a littleAnd then you added bass boost?
October 29, 201212 yr Author yes, and now it is starting to make sense...so as the bass boost goes up I my gain should have come down?
October 29, 201212 yr Author And is there any good instructional material out there so I can educate myself?
October 29, 201212 yr Bass boost should never be used. It introduces clipping which is not good for the amp or the sub. You are on the right track setting your gain by ear, but when you adjust things after you set it that is where you are going wrong. What kind of enclosure?
October 29, 201212 yr http://lmgtfy.com/?q=how+to+set+gain+on+ampliferhttp://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp~TID~85479~PN~1or
October 29, 201212 yr Author A ported box built to jl's specs. Sounded amazing after i built the box (had no idea how much difference a good enclosure makes)...so I shouldnt use the bass boost knob that is next to my gain on the amp?
October 29, 201212 yr No bass boost at all. Find out what preout voltage your headunit is and match your amplifiers gain to that number or just keep setting it by ear the way you were. It seems like you want more from your subwoofer so your applying the bass boost, not a good idea.
October 29, 201212 yr Thread jacking here. When I added bass boost to my subs they played deeper and sounded better. Without the boost. my subs sounded "hallow", "thin", the bass just didn't hit as hard. What could I have done to have the subs play as deep without having the bass boost on? Should I add more bass from the e.q. or head unit?
October 29, 201212 yr When you turn up bass boost or the EQ from your head unit you are asking the amplifier to double, triple, or quadruple or more the power for a very narrow set of frequencies (typically 45 htz or so for bass boost). Unless you have tons of headroom from your amp, and most people don't, it sends a very clipped signal which can cause your subs (or other speakers) to fail. Don't boost, cut.
October 30, 201212 yr Author So you dont recomend adjusting the EQ on your head unit either? Keep it flat or what?
October 30, 201212 yr So you dont recomend adjusting the EQ on your head unit either? Keep it flat or what?As Mike said the best way to use an EQ is to lower the peaks rather than raise the dips.
October 30, 201212 yr Author sigh, so much to learn. Need to do serious homework before I drop my savings on new equipment! I guess having nice shit does no good if you have no idea how to set it up properly and get the most out of your equipment
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