Naledge503
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0 NeutralAbout Naledge503
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Newbie
- Birthday 05/26/1980
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Naledge503
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Website URL
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=83293397
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Location
Por-Town City, Or
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I will try to get vids up ASAP.
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I got the enclosure today!! Thanks again BJ. Its great as usual. I will have install pics by tomorrow, and maybe a vid.
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I love it. Thats exactly how I visioned it, looks great. Thanks again BJ!
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I owned a pair of the older 2.5's a couple of years ago, cant wait to compare. I'm sure they will take some good power as the older 2.5's did. I actually would have been running 2-3 of the older 2.5's if the subs that I bought from a member on CA.com had all came unbroken. But they did come broken and now I will be running the sdc2.5's instead.
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Awesomeness!! I cant wait to get everything in. Thanks again BJ. This is my 2nd enclosure from BJ. The first is the "Fireproof box" lol. Great guy to talk to. Great CS and build quality as usual. System is in my sig.
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Happy Bday BJ Fisher!
Naledge503 replied to Mark LaFountain's topic in News, Announcements, and Lobby
Happy Birfday. -
Wow, this has been an excellent read for me so far. Thanks guys.
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Here's a couple more pics.
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I guess I was unclear in my initial post, cause that is exactly what I was trying to say lol.
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While that is true and makes sense, I was saying that people try to make up for the lack of power they have by turning the gain or bb or subwoofer level on the H/U. I always understood that this can cause clipping as well. Have I been mislead the whole time. It takes power to make power. Example, Say I am running an amp that calls for 200A but my alt and electrical is only to supply it with 95A, I am only going to get so much power out of my amp. Now if I try to make up for that lack of power by turning up the gain, bb, or sub level, I can cause the amp to clip. Right?
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not generally the case. An amp with an unregulated power supply will just put out less power with a lower input voltage. An amp with a regulated power supply will pull more current as the voltage drops so that it can keep the output power the same. Clipping generally occurs on the signal side of the equation, when the input voltage from the HU is higher than the amp's gain setting. So you dont think by dialing up the gain, bb, or subwoofer level to make up for power that you cant make doesnt cause a clipped signal? So we should all run stock electrical no matter how big of a "system" we have and just max out the gain and BB? Cause thats not the signal coming in. I'm trying to understand...
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Its about clipping and pushing the driver beyond its thermal limits. People turn their gain, bb and subwoofer setting hoping to get the loudness they are looking for. When you dont have the Electrical to back up that much power, the amp is trying to produce power that it cant make...clipping.
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He says they are, so we shall see. I know there are a lot of different types of coverage. And they vary from state to state too. I hope they help him out. lol....so true.
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**accidently double posted. Dont know how to delete the post.
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I sold the Q's and the enclosure to the guy who owns/owned the jeep yesterday. He just bought the jeep last Thursday. He was borrowing my amp, so he is giving me an AQ2200D that he ordered a couple of days ago and is supposed to be here on the 10th. He said that the firefighter told him that it started from faulty wiring in the rear dome light. I guess the asphalt melted too but the enclosure was still in one piece lol.