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fatalize
10-21-2008, 05:03 AM
hey all im new to this site, and to car audio setups, i have a 15" sub and box and im wondering how many amp watts should i be looking at per sub watt, like 2:1 or have i got this totally wrong :confused:, please i need some advice :)
i just want really good bass :D

exalted512
10-21-2008, 01:34 PM
10,000 watts should be about right a 15".
-Cody

MacLeod
10-22-2008, 12:30 AM
hey all im new to this site, and to car audio setups, i have a 15" sub and box and im wondering how many amp watts should i be looking at per sub watt, like 2:1 or have i got this totally wrong :confused:, please i need some advice :)
i just want really good bass :D

Yeah, youre totally wrong.

Watts is a measurement of power. Watts on an amp tell you how powerful that amp is. Watts on a sub tell you how much power that sub can withstand. If you have a sub rated at 500 watts then you need an amp that makes 500 watts.

only126db
10-22-2008, 12:35 AM
Not all manufacturers tell the truth about power output capabilities or power handling capabilities.

It is usually safe to get an amp that is rated 25-50% higher rms than the sub you plan on powering.

Just make sure your gain levels are set to not over power the subwoofer.

Jstas
10-22-2008, 11:12 AM
Not all manufacturers tell the truth about power output capabilities or power handling capabilities.

It is usually safe to get an amp that is rated 25-50% higher rms than the sub you plan on powering.

Just make sure your gain levels are set to not over power the subwoofer.

If you listen to this jackass then you deserve what you get.

fatalize
10-23-2008, 07:06 AM
thanks for the help so far, so if i had a 15" sub with a maximum output of 2000W and Max Power of 1200W (Peak Power) what kind of wattage amp should i look for?

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-23-2008, 07:25 AM
I would follow the advice in post #4.:D

Jstas
10-23-2008, 12:27 PM
thanks for the help so far, so if i had a 15" sub with a maximum output of 2000W and Max Power of 1200W (Peak Power) what kind of wattage amp should i look for?

How about you just tell us what subwoofer you have because you are obviously very confused and trying to straighten you out and answer your questions at the same time is frustratingly difficult.






I would follow the advice in post #4.:D

And people should listen to you because...???

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-24-2008, 04:48 AM
And people should listen to you because...???

Oh, come on! Can’t I have a little fun with one of the most elementary audio questions ever asked? OK, I have changed my mind. He should buy an amplifier where its continuous average power rating is 100% higher than the woofer in question continuous power handling. Are you going tell me I’m wrong again? Or, maybe you should do a search for amplifier clipping, or headroom. More power is always the answer when moving large motor structures in subwoofers.

Jstas
10-24-2008, 10:50 AM
Oh, come on! Can’t I have a little fun with one of the most elementary audio questions ever asked? OK, I have changed my mind. He should buy an amplifier where its continuous average power rating is 100% higher than the woofer in question continuous power handling. Are you going tell me I’m wrong again? Or, maybe you should do a search for amplifier clipping, or headroom. More power is always the answer when moving large motor structures in subwoofers.

You came in here and your first post was supposed to be sarcasm. It was also in support of a known and self-avowed troll who has threatened to "bring all of his friends" here to show us all what's up. Usually, for most people, post number 1 is a "Hey, how ya doin'?" kind of post.

Jeff Beaird
10-24-2008, 11:22 AM
hey all im new to this site, and to car audio setups, i have a 15" sub and box and im wondering how many amp watts should i be looking at per sub watt, like 2:1 or have i got this totally wrong :confused:, please i need some advice :)
i just want really good bass :D

OK, before this gets out of hand....
Fate, which model 15" sub do you have and what size box? Ported, sealed..?
A little more info please.

Jstas
10-24-2008, 11:26 AM
OK, before this gets out of hand....
Fate, which model 15" sub do you have and what size box? Ported, sealed..?
A little more info please.

Asked that already. He hasn't answered.

Oh and thanks for being our savior.

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-24-2008, 05:53 PM
Sorry

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-24-2008, 05:55 PM
Not all manufacturers tell the truth about power output capabilities or power handling capabilities.

This is correct! Most peak, or continuous power ratings are wishy washy at best.


It is usually safe to get an amp that is rated 25-50% higher rms than the sub you plan on powering..

This is correct! Over powering any subwoofer of any type will lower your chances of blowing the woofer.


Just make sure your gain levels are set to not over power the subwoofer.

This is the correct answer for any car audio amplifier. Good advice, even if you are a troll.

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-25-2008, 07:22 AM
You came in here and your first post was supposed to be sarcasm. It was also in support of a known and self-avowed troll who has threatened to "bring all of his friends" here to show us all what's up. Usually, for most people, post number 1 is a "Hey, how ya doin'?" kind of post.

Hi everybody! My home/car audio experience runs from roughly “83” to present time. My home theater experience runs from the early “90s” to present time. My headphone experience runs from the late millennium to present. My love for music started at around age 6 listening to the radio. I am probably the most open minded individual one could possibly meet, and it was only a matter of time that I actually joined the forum of the loudspeaker manufacturer that I have recommended more of their products to people "not in the know" than any other. I believe it is very difficult to develop products to satisfy the audiophile, and the music lover at the same time. This is something Polk Audio over the years has excelled at within its price range.

exalted512
10-25-2008, 10:07 AM
This is correct! Over powering any subwoofer of any type will lower your chances of blowing the woofer.


logically, how does this make any sense at all?
-Cody

only126db
10-25-2008, 01:05 PM
logically, how does this make any sense at all?
-Cody

Not sure if he meant overpowering, more like running clean power in excess of a quality manufacturers recommendations.(this is done frequently and with great success)

Running dirty clipped power above or below manufacturer recommendations will stress your amplifier and heat up your voice coils due to amps sending an intermitent dc current to the sub which they are not made to handle and will likely damage the speaker.(this is done frequently with terrible results)

only126db
10-25-2008, 01:14 PM
If you listen to this jackass then you deserve what you get.

I'm still waiting for you to prove me wrong in anything.....

My subs still work, sound better than they did sealed(above 30hz) they are being powered by an amplifier over manufacturer suggested power. I have had not one problem with my setup, I get no light dimming running 2600 watts of amplification off a single battery and 60 amp alternator.

I have never had one person say the sound of my system is anything but great, from shop owners, installers, the mail man, neighbors, people at the one competition I went to, cruises, the friggin grocery store, driving next to me etc.

Now to say if you listen to me you get what you deserve, I am going to take that as a compliment and would tell all, yes listen to me and you will get what you deserve, a quality very capable sound system with no issues that you can enjoy for years to come.

exalted512
10-25-2008, 06:58 PM
Theres no way youre getting 2600w off of a 60A alternator. Its physically impossible.
-Cody

MacLeod
10-26-2008, 01:14 AM
Running dirty clipped power above or below manufacturer recommendations will stress your amplifier and heat up your voice coils due to amps sending an intermitent dc current to the sub which they are not made to handle and will likely damage the speaker.(this is done frequently with terrible results)

OVERPOWERING is the ONLY thing that kills a speaker. You either build up more heat than the voice coil can dissipate or you push the suspension beyond its mechanical limits. The only way to do that is by overpowering. And it doesnt matter if that signal is clipped or clean.


Most peak, or continuous power ratings are wishy washy at best.

Peak power ratings are worthless however RMS ratings are usually pretty close to being on in terms of amplifiers. In all the test reports Ive read on amps, Id say better than 98% meet their rated power and the ones that come in under are only a few watts off. Buy a quality name brand amp and you can pretty much be rest assured youre getting the watts youre paying for.


Over powering any subwoofer of any type will lower your chances of blowing the woofer.

Nope. Buying a bigger amp than your speakers are rated to handle does mean youll have more headroom to play with but it also means it will be EASIER to blow your speakers.


so if i had a 15" sub with a maximum output of 2000W and Max Power of 1200W (Peak Power) what kind of wattage amp should i look for?

Ignore the peak/max rating of anything audio related. Subs dont have an "output rating". That is a rating of how much power the sub can handle thermally and mechanically. If your sub is rated at 500 watts RMS then you need to find an amp that makes 500 RMS.


Not all manufacturers tell the truth about power output capabilities or power handling capabilities.

Yeah, actually they do. Over the years Ive seen virtually every make of amp tested and reviewed in different magazines and such and Id say 99% of them easily met their rated specs. Granted there have been some like Hifonics and Alphasonik that have fell short but it wasnt by more than a few watts. So long as youre buying a quality name brand amplifier you can be rest assured that youre getting the watts you payed for and probably a little more.

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-26-2008, 05:03 AM
Please use a little common sense here. No one is going to blow a woofer by having too much power unless they are trying to. The sound of a woofer being purposely pushed that hard sounds unacceptable, and your ears and a little common sense should be enough to tell one to turn down the volume.
I have taken bookshelf speakers with a one-inch tweeter, and a 6 ½ woofer and ran 500 watt per channel mono blocks on them to the point that they were physically moving back and forth on the bookshelf with no damage. I could imagine what would happen if I had done that same thing with a 50 watt per channel receiver that was bought from Best Buy. If someone blows a woofer with too much power they deserve it.

eloplayspolo
10-26-2008, 06:42 AM
Oh. I'm convinced.

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-26-2008, 08:00 AM
Oh. I'm convinced.

Are you? Well, I guess if I can’t beat ‘em I must join ‘em. One should use his CD deck to drive his, or her subwoofers. Crank ‘em up boys! :D

eloplayspolo
10-26-2008, 02:14 PM
the problem is that u join the forum..... and ur first post ur a jackass.... and ur next few posts argue with professionals who make 1000s of posts on this site and 1 of which has a pretty damn good record wining many competitions.

Idk how old u are but ur never going to get through life by arguing with more informed people on a topic if u can never admit that maybe they do know more than me and maybe if i just shut my mouth and learn something ill become a better informed person.

But u run along and argue with Phill Jackson and tell him that the lakers offense is all wrong.

exalted512
10-26-2008, 03:57 PM
Please use a little common sense here. No one is going to blow a woofer by having too much power unless they are trying to. The sound of a woofer being purposely pushed that hard sounds unacceptable, and your ears and a little common sense should be enough to tell one to turn down the volume.
I have taken bookshelf speakers with a one-inch tweeter, and a 6 ½ woofer and ran 500 watt per channel mono blocks on them to the point that they were physically moving back and forth on the bookshelf with no damage. I could imagine what would happen if I had done that same thing with a 50 watt per channel receiver that was bought from Best Buy. If someone blows a woofer with too much power they deserve it.

Maybe you're not understanding, so let me try to make it as clear as possible.

OVER POWERING A SPEAKER IS THE ONLY WAY TO KILL IT.

I've seen many speakers blow under conditions where you can not audibly hear the speaker meeting its mechanical limits, but it was getting pushed passed its thermal limits.

Having headroom is just fine. If you have a 500 watt subwoofer and a 1000 watt amp, that is fine, if you set the gains accordingly. But then don't turn around and say I have a 1000watts going to my 500w sub and its doing fine. No, you have 500 watts going to a 500w sub and its doing fine.

Also, its highly unlikely your bookshelf system was getting anywhere near 500w rms and it not blow unless you only played it for less than 15 seconds.

-Cody

rdb2001
10-26-2008, 03:59 PM
I am new to polk forums but have been in home theater and car audio for years. Anybody that knows anything about car audio knows that your chances are greater to blow a speaker when you are underpowering it. Now i am not saying go hook up a 500w rms sub to 1000 watt rms speaker, but if you have a amp thats rated a little higher in watts than your sub then you should be ok as long as you keep your gain set at a nice level.

only126db
10-26-2008, 06:50 PM
OVERPOWERING is the ONLY thing that kills a speaker.


If you feel like learning something than read this entire article or just take not to this particular line.....

"clipping with real-world (speech or music) signals creates not only the harmonics that have been described in innumerable web pages, but also generates a subsonic signal that is potentially very damaging to drivers, but is never mentioned. This signal has the capability to cause driver damage at worst, or unwanted cone modulation and additional loudspeaker distortion at best - neither can be considered a desirable outcome."

http://sound.westhost.com/clipping.htm#s21

only126db
10-26-2008, 07:12 PM
Theres no way youre getting 2600w off of a 60A alternator. Its physically impossible.
-Cody

It is possible, but not continuously.

Now if running completely off of a 60 amp source, no it's not possible, but with the momentary current output of a battery a 2600 watt peak is not out of the question.

exalted512
10-26-2008, 08:30 PM
I am new to polk forums but have been in home theater and car audio for years. Anybody that knows anything about car audio knows that your chances are greater to blow a speaker when you are underpowering it. Now i am not saying go hook up a 500w rms sub to 1000 watt rms speaker, but if you have a amp thats rated a little higher in watts than your sub then you should be ok as long as you keep your gain set at a nice level.

Are you reading what you type? How does it make sense, logically, that underpowering a speaker will kill it? That is equivalent to saying that driving your car 10 mph under the speed limit will kill it faster than putting the pedal to the floor all the time. IT MAKES NO SENSE.


It is possible, but not continuously.

Now if running completely off of a 60 amp source, no it's not possible, but with the momentary current output of a battery a 2600 watt peak is not out of the question.

I thought you were talking about continuous. Even still, if you get 2600w spikes off a single battery, your lights will dim. If you're not getting dimming, youre not getting 2600w.


If you feel like learning something than read this entire article or just take not to this particular line.....

"clipping with real-world (speech or music) signals creates not only the harmonics that have been described in innumerable web pages, but also generates a subsonic signal that is potentially very damaging to drivers, but is never mentioned. This signal has the capability to cause driver damage at worst, or unwanted cone modulation and additional loudspeaker distortion at best - neither can be considered a desirable outcome."

http://sound.westhost.com/clipping.htm#s21

When an amplifier clips, it can send on average 4x the amount of power to a driver as normal. So if you have a 50w speaker and a 50w rms amplifier, and it clips, youre sending about 200w to that speaker.

what does that mean? YOURE OVERPOWERING THE SPEAKER.

Now lets say you have the same 50w speaker, but a 10w amplifier. You push the amplifier into clipping, its now producing 40watts. Fortunately, the speaker can handle 50w. Your speaker is going to be fine. Why? BECAUSE ITS STILL GETTING UNDERPOWERED.

Its very simple really, I'm not sure if anyone else has said this yet, but...

THE ONLY WAY TO KILL A SPEAKER IS BY OVERPOWERING IT.
-Cody

rdb2001
10-26-2008, 09:50 PM
What kills me on here is that everyone on here who have a millions of post thinks they are gods gift to sound and speakers. You obviously dont know much about what you are saying. Read up on an speaker, under powering the speaker hurts that speaker more than overpowering, hence why speakers 9 times out of time have bad sound quality when being underpowered. Before you type read up on what you are saying. Just because you are on polk, that doesnt mean you know everything. I have found that all the regulars on here seem to think they know everything and try to gain up on new people who have the same or more knowledge than you might have. I compete in the car audio relm and know what I am talking about. I never said you can overpower it alot, but you can blow it easier underpowering it than overpowering it a little. So before you go telling me what I dont know what do you have to prove you even have a system and I am not talking about posting what you have. I mean pictures. Because alot of you get on here and claim to have so much but probably dont have any of what u say.

only126db
10-26-2008, 10:11 PM
Ya know, its funny I run into so many conflicting theories on underpowering speakers, I'm begining to think nobody really knows...

JBL says clipped signals will kill a speaker...

Rane says no they wont.....

Yet I have burnt woofers in years past by over driving the amplifier.

I have also used many speakers well over their rms ratings with very good results.

And exalted512, I will test my amplifier output just for you, I have a program I am wanting to test out and see for my self what my system does, of course it will be test tones, I will evaluate using a couple tones and relay the info to you and let you know what my Polks are handling in their ported boxes...

Airplay355
10-26-2008, 10:20 PM
What if the clipping comes from the source and is amplified by the amplifier resulting in a blown speaker? Is that still overpowering a speaker?

MacLeod
10-26-2008, 10:42 PM
OK. So Im competing in a national car audio competition organization with no gear?? And I suppose Cody has been imagining working as an installer all these years and those SPL competitions he's been to were all a mirage??? Gotcha.

The misconception of underpowering kills speakers comes from when you use a small amp it will be easier to push the amp into clipping which results in a signal being sent out that is limited only to the amps input voltage which comes out to 2-3 times the amps rated power. So a 50 watt amp clipped, would make 125-150 watts. Now if you have that 50 watt amp hooked up to a 75 watt speaker youre gonna fry it. BUT it wasnt because it was underpowered - it was because it was overpowered and it was that overpowering that either ripped the suspension apart or melted the voice coil.

The misconception that distortion kills speakers is that when you push a speaker to its mechanical limits (which only happens when you overpower it), it distorts and if you continue to push it too hard, it will finally blow. So some think that the distortion killed it because it was distorting before it blew when in fact it was the overpowering that did it in. Just like being shot by a gun. Its not the loud bang that kills ya, its those pesky bullets. A speaker doesnt care how distorted the signal is its being fed - so long as its below its thermal and mechanical limits.

In the fake lanes Ive been faking competing in the last 3 years, Ive seen several fake cars blow mids, tweeters and subs with power as clean and pure as the virgin Mary herself. A lot of SQ guys run several hundred watts RMS per driver (not me of course because Im faking) and when youre running a 400 watt amp to a single midrange, that is more than enough to rip it apart.


What if the clipping comes from the source and is amplified by the amplifier resulting in a blown speaker? Is that still overpowering a speaker?

No. The signal coming from the source is passive. If it clips, the amplifier will receiver the clipped signal as distorted and reproduce it as such but not at the same level the amp would be at if it were clipping.

CRESCENDOPOWER
10-27-2008, 02:25 AM
Maybe you're not understanding, so let me try to make it as clear as possible.

OVER POWERING A SPEAKER IS THE ONLY WAY TO KILL IT.

I've seen many speakers blow under conditions where you can not audibly hear the speaker meeting its mechanical limits, but it was getting pushed passed its thermal limits.

Having headroom is just fine. If you have a 500 watt subwoofer and a 1000 watt amp, that is fine, if you set the gains accordingly. But then don't turn around and say I have a 1000watts going to my 500w sub and its doing fine. No, you have 500 watts going to a 500w sub and its doing fine.

Also, its highly unlikely your bookshelf system was getting anywhere near 500w rms and it not blow unless you only played it for less than 15 seconds.

-Cody

LOL,

The whole reason one buys a higher powered amplifier is to not use all of the power so that the amplifier has no chance of clipping. Of course someone could blow a speaker with a higher powered amplifier than what the speaker is rated at but if he, or she does they are an idiot. There are limitations to what some speakers, or woofers can do.

fatalize
10-27-2008, 05:20 AM
back on topic please people :)
okay the sub i plan on buying is either this
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000PF7SG4?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&tag=nextag-ce-tier5-delta-20&linkCode=asn
or this
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000EOM8EI?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&tag=nextag-ce-tier1-delta-20&linkCode=asn
and the box i plan on using (dont mind the photoshop :P)
http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/5003/subboxtf0.png (http://imageshack.us)
http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/subboxtf0.png/1/w400.png (http://g.imageshack.us/img183/subboxtf0.png/1/)
any advice on the amp i should get or anything else would be greatly appreciated.
sorry for my absense i was away for the weekend.
thanks :D
or you can sugest a sub and box for me if mine are shit. lol
also if you would like to know the head unit and speakers im using, just ask.

eloplayspolo
10-27-2008, 06:26 AM
not to be negative here.... but both those speakers are complete crap.

fatalize
10-27-2008, 06:43 AM
then give me suggestion, thats what i asked if you think there crap

exalted512
10-27-2008, 10:16 AM
What kills me on here is that everyone on here who have a millions of post thinks they are gods gift to sound and speakers. You obviously dont know much about what you are saying. Read up on an speaker, under powering the speaker hurts that speaker more than overpowering, hence why speakers 9 times out of time have bad sound quality when being underpowered. Before you type read up on what you are saying. Just because you are on polk, that doesnt mean you know everything. I have found that all the regulars on here seem to think they know everything and try to gain up on new people who have the same or more knowledge than you might have. I compete in the car audio relm and know what I am talking about. I never said you can overpower it alot, but you can blow it easier underpowering it than overpowering it a little. So before you go telling me what I dont know what do you have to prove you even have a system and I am not talking about posting what you have. I mean pictures. Because alot of you get on here and claim to have so much but probably dont have any of what u say.

YOU still have not answered why a speaker getting less power than its rated for is more likely to kill it. How that even begins to make sense is beyond me. Also, sound quality has nothing to do with how much power you give it. Its still going to play the same at 10w or 50w. Please do not associate 'louder' with 'sounds better' as so many in this hobby do.

As far as me, I'm a full time installer. I don't have a sub system in my truck right now, still working on the new setup. When you do it 6 days a week 9.5 hours a day, it gets to be the last thing I want to do when I get home.

Here are the picture's you requested:
http://www.cardomain.com/ride/531337/9

Your turn.


Ya know, its funny I run into so many conflicting theories on underpowering speakers, I'm begining to think nobody really knows...

JBL says clipped signals will kill a speaker...

Rane says no they wont.....

Yet I have burnt woofers in years past by over driving the amplifier.

I have also used many speakers well over their rms ratings with very good results.

And exalted512, I will test my amplifier output just for you, I have a program I am wanting to test out and see for my self what my system does, of course it will be test tones, I will evaluate using a couple tones and relay the info to you and let you know what my Polks are handling in their ported boxes...

Well, clipping by itself does not kill speakers. Unfortunately, there are so many stupid people in this industry, many manufacturers will dumb things down. As in the myth that underpowering kills speakers. It does not. But then you get the idiots that dont want to pay for a larger, quality amplifier and get a smaller POS, turn the gains all the way up and blow their speakers because the clipped signal they were sending their subs was way beyond their power handling. Then, people say the cause is underpowering speakers. It was not. It was installer error. And having a larger amplifier does not mean its harder to clip. Its just the same. But when that amp does clip, its going to kill a speaker in half the time that it will with a smaller amp.

I'm curious as to know your testing methods. There's not a whole lot of people that have access to the tools needed to properly test the output of an amp. 99% of shops dont even have the equipment (we are one of them). You can get an estimate by measuring the AC voltage speaker outputs, but its only maybe 75% accurate.


LOL,

The whole reason one buys a higher powered amplifier is to not use all of the power so that the amplifier has no chance of clipping. Of course someone could blow a speaker with a higher powered amplifier than what the speaker is rated at but if he, or she does they are an idiot. There are limitations to what some speakers, or woofers can do.
Actually, a lot of people will turn up a larger amplifier just as much as they would have if it was smaller. This is from years of experience from selling the damn things. Then when the customer returns with bad speakers and tells me "I read on the internet overpowering a speaker is better than underpowering it" I have to sit down with them and explain how that is wrong. That is why I don't let it slide when I hear people talk about it on the internet. IT IS WRONG.

I have an amp that is rated at 50x4 @ 4, does closer to 180ish x4 @ 4 ohms, and I have each channel going to a tweeter and a 3" midrange. The gains are set at absolute 0. Its still gets pretty loud and the sound is amazing. i'm not saying, dont get a bigger amplifier, all I'm saying is set the gains accordingly. And nor do I tell people i have almost 200w going to each midrange and tweeter. I do not. I have an amp capable of that, but in real life theyre getting 50w when I crank it up.
-Cody

exalted512
10-27-2008, 10:28 AM
back on topic please people :)
okay the sub i plan on buying is either this
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000PF7SG4?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&tag=nextag-ce-tier5-delta-20&linkCode=asn
or this
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000EOM8EI?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&tag=nextag-ce-tier1-delta-20&linkCode=asn
and the box i plan on using (dont mind the photoshop :P)
http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/5003/subboxtf0.png (http://imageshack.us)
http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/subboxtf0.png/1/w400.png (http://g.imageshack.us/img183/subboxtf0.png/1/)
any advice on the amp i should get or anything else would be greatly appreciated.
sorry for my absense i was away for the weekend.
thanks :D
or you can sugest a sub and box for me if mine are shit. lol
also if you would like to know the head unit and speakers im using, just ask.
What is your budget for the amp/subs/wiring?

What kind of car is it going in?

What radio do you have?
-Cody

fatalize
10-27-2008, 11:23 AM
car is a 1991 nissan maxima, and my budget is average/ish, haha i dont want anything way over the top bass, just enough to sound reasonably good.
im looking at getting this head unit
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kenwood-KDC-W312SAY-Radio-MP3-Receiver/dp/B000WE7YXK/ref=dp_cp_ob_ce_title_1/279-0664623-8079955?ie=UTF8&qid=1225117311&sr=1-6

feel free to help me out and request/give links to a good setup or combo of things to get.
thanks. :)

Jstas
10-27-2008, 11:35 AM
Why does this forum always get afflicted with assholes like these? Then, when I yell at them and tell them they are assholes, I get "called out" to furnish proof and told I'm a big meany, angry and a know-it-all. But if everyone else does it, it's "discussion"?


You morons want your proof? Here: http://www.splung.com/ It's called physics and you can't change the rules just because some half-assed "testing" in your garage shows "undeniable proof" that what you think is right is right and the greatest minds in history are dead wrong. What's that? You don't need no stinkin' math to tell you what you already know? Guess what champ, go get an 'effing education and THEN come back and tell me and everyone else here how wrong we are. I'm betting you'd have an epiphany before then and be too embarrassed to show your user name here again. But then again, the surer bet is on your arrogance and blissful ignorance in thinking that you have all the answers.

Again, I maintain as well as others here, that any success any yahoos like you have had has been pure luck or through the guidance of others who actually know what they are talking about and have set you up with very conservative systems so as to avoid a the pain of having to deal with monumental asshats such as yourselves who blew their junk up and have no idea how or why they could have caused it.





fatalize, you need to furnish more complete info. I agree with the others, the subs you have chosen are not the best idea. I would honestly go with a Polk Audio DB series sub and a Profile California series amp because you seem to be on a budget and they will give you the best bang for the buck. Also, the DB subs seem to be very forgiving in their ported dimension so a generic ported box from a company like Q-Logic should give you a decent amount of performance and not cost an arm and a leg. If you are planning on competing, you have a great deal to learn before you can be successful.

The "Air Hole Thingo" is called a port and it's pretty important to the whole design. If you are planning on building your own box, decide on a woofer and post it here along with the space that the box has to fit in and I will help you put together a vented enclosure that will compliment the woofer as best as possible. They require some complex math equations and I have design software that I can use to model enclosures quickly and easily without having to fuss with all the math.

I also feel I have to apologize for the sucktastic behavior of only126db, CRESCENDOPOWER and rdb2001 for not only the behavior they have exhibited but the perpetuation of myths as fact and for purporting misinformation as common sense and under general acceptance. Nothing could be farther from the truth.







Was that too harsh? You know what? To paraphrase Mr. Grand, that's probably going to offend someone and they need to know ahead off time that I don't care.

Jstas
10-27-2008, 11:41 AM
car is a 1991 nissan maxima, and my budget is average/ish, haha i dont want anything way over the top bass, just enough to sound reasonably good.
im looking at getting this head unit
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kenwood-KDC-W312SAY-Radio-MP3-Receiver/dp/B000WE7YXK/ref=dp_cp_ob_ce_title_1/279-0664623-8079955?ie=UTF8&qid=1225117311&sr=1-6

feel free to help me out and request/give links to a good setup or combo of things to get.
thanks. :)

Are you in in the U.K.?

If so, your selection of audio gear tends to be different from ours. However, specs are specs and if you can provide links or specs of equipment you are looking to use, that would be better than this piecemeal process of dragging info out of you.

The specs are the headunit are OK. I like the 24 bit DA converter but I think you would be better served finding something with a 4V pre-amp (RCA) output level or better. If your budget allows of course.

As far as budget, "average-ish" doesn't help. We need a number, dude. Can't select components with a budget in mind if you don't set a number and say how high above or below that number you are willing to go.

fatalize
10-27-2008, 11:44 AM
sorry if im making you guys do so much work/math stuff but ive decided to get a polk :)
http://www.polkaudio.com/caraudio/products/15inch/speakers/mm2154/
what amp, and box should i get?
i have a 1991 nissan maxima (lol :P) the boot is fairly large

fatalize
10-27-2008, 11:46 AM
money isnt all that much of an issue, id be willing to spend another ~$600-$700 on top of that sub (might be able to pull out a bit more if i have to :D)

only126db
10-27-2008, 01:11 PM
I'm curious as to know your testing methods. There's not a whole lot of people that have access to the tools needed to properly test the output of an amp. 99% of shops dont even have the equipment (we are one of them). You can get an estimate by measuring the AC voltage speaker outputs, but its only maybe 75% accurate.


-Cody

I have a program which determines output power by calculating amp current draw, start voltage, voltage drop, output volts a/c, output amps a/c, speaker re, spl, and by what frequency you test at.

The program determines impedance rise, output rms, and amp efficiency if you have all the input values that are required, of course the only one I will not have is spl since I dont have access to a powerful enough meter at this moment, but I believe that will only affect the impedance rise.

So to fully use the program you would need a clamp meter, a couple DMM's, and an spl meter to be accurate, plus 3-4 pairs of eyes.

But with one DMM a clamp meter and a long test tone you can get pretty darn close.

I personaly have not used it with my actual measurements but several people on a different forum who know there actual power through competition say it's accurate.

only126db
10-27-2008, 01:32 PM
I also feel I have to apologize for the sucktastic behavior of only126db, CRESCENDOPOWER and rdb2001 for not only the behavior they have exhibited but the perpetuation of myths as fact and for purporting misinformation as common sense and under general acceptance. Nothing could be farther from the truth.


Was that too harsh? You know what? To paraphrase Mr. Grand, that's probably going to offend someone and they need to know ahead off time that I don't care.

Dont appologize for me, we sure are glad you have software....

I do too.....

Anyone else?

And so not to keep jacking this guys topic if you feel like seeing what mine does you can go to my post
"report on polk death" you know the one...:rolleyes:

fatalize
10-27-2008, 02:10 PM
yeah this has kinda gone off track, but if anyone could post some helpfull info/replys to the last couple messages i typed up. id be gratefull

only126db
10-27-2008, 02:42 PM
car is a 1991 nissan maxima, and my budget is average/ish, haha i dont want anything way over the top bass, just enough to sound reasonably good.
im looking at getting this head unit
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kenwood-KDC-W312SAY-Radio-MP3-Receiver/dp/B000WE7YXK/ref=dp_cp_ob_ce_title_1/279-0664623-8079955?ie=UTF8&qid=1225117311&sr=1-6

feel free to help me out and request/give links to a good setup or combo of things to get.
thanks. :)


Ibelieve thats the equivalent of the US model 318 which I own, decent quality deck for the price....

Three things I dont like about it are:

1) One set of RCA outputs.

2) Volume knob is multi function and if changing volume and you hit a bump you will switch the eq preset and it automaticaly goes to a setting with high bass output.

3) The trim ring tends to sag a tiny bit which will sometimes keep a cd from ejecting fully(push down on cd lip a tiny bit and it'll eject).

As for a budget amp I have to agree with jstas(hate to say it).

Profile amps http://www.profileusa.com/products_amps_ap.cfm

Crunch http://www.maxxsonics.com/crunch/PZ_main.html

Hifonics http://www.maxxsonics.com/hifonics/amps_brutus.html
http://www.maxxsonics.com/hifonics/amps_zeus.html

Cadence http://www.cadencestore.com/ProductCart/pc/viewCategories.asp?idCategory=125

As for a budget Subwoofer I would recommend:

RE Audio http://www.reaudio.com/specs.html#sp_re

Mach5 http://www.mach5audio.com/zen/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=65&products_id=186

DIY http://www.diycable.com/main/product_info.php?cPath=24_93_150&products_id=653

RD Audio http://www.rdaudio.net/studio/studio.htm

Jstas
10-27-2008, 02:54 PM
Dont appologize for me, we sure are glad you have software....

I do too.....

Anyone else?

And so not to keep jacking this guys topic if you feel like seeing what mine does you can go to my post
"report on polk death" you know the one...:rolleyes:

I don't care what your software does, I don't care about your graphs of how you made a flat and progressive response from a sealed enclosure and compared it to the peaky response of a ported enclosure. I don't care and like the other people in this thread, I think you're a mental midget that thinks he's got everything figured out. And to think I actually stuck up for you when you got here and someone was bagging on you.

I offered to help the guy out by giving him calculated dimensions on his sub box if he's going to do it himself. He is obviously not in the know and I can help so I offered it.

fatalize
10-27-2008, 03:05 PM
thanks for all the links only126db :D
ill post back once i pick out some i like, and you guys can tell me if its a good combo :)

fatalize
10-27-2008, 03:09 PM
screw it, haha, ill look at the links tommorow its 4:30 am here :P
goin to sleep

Jstas
10-27-2008, 03:16 PM
yeah this has kinda gone off track, but if anyone could post some helpfull info/replys to the last couple messages i typed up. id be gratefull

Um, I did give you recommendations. The problem is that I can list all the fun stuff I would use here in the United States but it doesn't translate to your market there in the United Kingdom. Alot of the stuff I can get here, you can't get there. There is a difference so do your research and give us some ideas of what you are looking at AND a budget figure.


As far as what you posted already, I'll reiterate. Go higher in the lineup for the Kenwood head unit. The 300 series decks are marginally a step above entry level and really not worth the time unless you just need tunes for a work truck or something. Go with something in the 500 series or 600 series.

In fact, I would spend the extra coin and go with at least this unit:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/KENWOOD-KDC-W6541U-USB-MP3-Radio/dp/B00157SSVU/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1225130599&sr=1-1

You can't really go wrong with a head unit from Kenwood, Pioneer or Alpine. they are all built like tanks and offer a bunch of features for not a bunch of dollars. You just have to find one that will support your needs and desired performance.

If you are honestly serious about the MM2154, get this amplifier:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Phoenix-Gold-R5-0-Octane-Amplifier/dp/B0002BAD86/ref=sr_1_42?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1225130972&sr=1-42

Or something similar in quality and power. Again, I do not know what you have access to in the U.K.



That's the best you are going to get from us unless you start giving some numbers and ideas of what you have access to. And Amazon.com is not the best place to be buying audio equipment. They typically only stock thee high volume brands which are not highly regarded. Most of the stuff there is from Lanzar, Legacy and Pyle. Not exactly high-end...well, hell, not exactly mid-level brands there.

fatalize
10-28-2008, 01:13 AM
where did you guys get the idea that i was living in the UK :P
i live in australia :D

eloplayspolo
10-28-2008, 03:35 AM
because the amazon link you posted was .uk

fatalize
10-28-2008, 04:54 AM
o, i just followed a link i got from someone i didnt know it was a UK link :(

rdb2001
10-30-2008, 11:24 AM
I am posting a reply from a thread on this same subject.

McLoki
Polk Expert


Member Sales Rating: (4)


Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Central Illinois
Posts: 3,975

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No. (for example, I have a 500 watt amplifier but speakers that handle somewhere between 150 (LSi7's) and 350 (LSi15's) watts)

Personally I like the watts of the amp to be greater than the watts of the speaker. (this is not required by any means - but I feel it is safest to do it this way)

Reason being, it is pretty hard to blow a speaker with to many watts when playing music or movies. (it can happen, but you usually know when it is about to happen. - soundstage just collapses and everything just starts to sound wrong)

It is pretty easy to blow a speaker if your amp is not strong enough though because the amp runs out of steam but still tries to power the speaker. When it does this it sends a distorted signal to the speaker and the tweeter will usually fry.

In my example above - it would be much easier for me to blow my speakers using a 50wpc reciever than a 500wpc amplifier. It sounds backwards and wrong, but that is the way it is. Amplifiers running out of power is what usually blows speakers - not amplifiers with to much power.

Michael


And to Macloed

For you to say clarity does not come from whether you power a speaker with 10 w or 50 w. ARE YOU SERIOUS!!!!! Thats blasphemy. For you to know so much how can you possible say that. On another note, I respect everyones opinion. I also saw your setup and had the same underseat box setup and it sound terrible. I wanted to see how you got that to sound good. I have an avalanche, and I ended up going to a custom setup in my bed with a 6 cubic foot box and 1 kicker comp vr 15. I would say this was the best thing I could have done. It sounds great

JSTAS

You dont offend, you are one those big online talkers who wants to questions someones intellect when yet you do not have any yourself. I know that you are just one of those people who likes to hear or see yourself talk. Your post shows me how you really dont have a clue. You also told the guy to get a db series polk and a q logic box. Those are some of the worst built prefab boxes you can buy and polk db series speakers are just cheap. That set up is a terrible choice. When you actually post something that has some substance to it, I will be glad to read it.

only126db
10-30-2008, 07:51 PM
From a Powerbass rep on another forum...

"We really don't have many returns on the 2XL and 3XL lines. All the returns I've seen have been from underpowering them"

eloplayspolo
10-30-2008, 09:17 PM
polk db subs are NOT cheap. and if u think they are GTFO of these forums.

Q-logic- i agree, i rather put my sub in my closet.

exalted512
10-30-2008, 11:07 PM
No. (for example, I have a 500 watt amplifier but speakers that handle somewhere between 150 (LSi7's) and 350 (LSi15's) watts)

Personally I like the watts of the amp to be greater than the watts of the speaker. (this is not required by any means - but I feel it is safest to do it this way)

Reason being, it is pretty hard to blow a speaker with to many watts when playing music or movies. (it can happen, but you usually know when it is about to happen. - soundstage just collapses and everything just starts to sound wrong)

It is pretty easy to blow a speaker if your amp is not strong enough though because the amp runs out of steam but still tries to power the speaker. When it does this it sends a distorted signal to the speaker and the tweeter will usually fry.

In my example above - it would be much easier for me to blow my speakers using a 50wpc reciever than a 500wpc amplifier. It sounds backwards and wrong, but that is the way it is. Amplifiers running out of power is what usually blows speakers - not amplifiers with to much power.
1. Please learn how to quote.
2. If you are setting your amplifiers up right, you will never clip them. If you are clipping them, it is installer error. And you can clip a bigger amp just as easily as you can a smaller amp, but when the bigger amp clips, its going to fry your gear a lot faster.




For you to say clarity does not come from whether you power a speaker with 10 w or 50 w. ARE YOU SERIOUS!!!!! Thats blasphemy. For you to know so much how can you possible say that. On another note, I respect everyones opinion. I also saw your setup and had the same underseat box setup and it sound terrible. I wanted to see how you got that to sound good. I have an avalanche, and I ended up going to a custom setup in my bed with a 6 cubic foot box and 1 kicker comp vr 15. I would say this was the best thing I could have done. It sounds great
i believe i was the one who said that. no, its not blasphemy, its the truth. The properties of a speaker do not change as they are given more power, theres not some magic volume where you start hearing symbols at volume 15 that you didnt hear at volume 10. Its all the same. Unfortunately, 90% of the car audio community associates 'louder' with 'sounds better,' like yourself.

I dont have any bracketry under my rear seat like an avalanche does, that and fiberglassing the bottom allowed me to get a good amount of air space. Nothing like 6 cubes, but it was also a sealed box. I would have liked to see what it could do with more power behind it, but the alternator wouldn't have taken anything more that what I had. Since then, I've moved to a newer truck which will eventually get a pair of 250+A alternators.



JSTAS

You dont offend, you are one those big online talkers who wants to questions someones intellect when yet you do not have any yourself. I know that you are just one of those people who likes to hear or see yourself talk. Your post shows me how you really dont have a clue. You also told the guy to get a db series polk and a q logic box. Those are some of the worst built prefab boxes you can buy and polk db series speakers are just cheap. That set up is a terrible choice. When you actually post something that has some substance to it, I will be glad to read it.
While I wont dispute that q-logic has starting making crappier boxes over the last few years, the db series are by no means 'just cheap'. They might not get as loud, but they sound a helluva lot better than your CVRs. And this is coming from someone who carries Kicker in his shop, but not Polk.
-Cody

exalted512
10-30-2008, 11:07 PM
From a Powerbass rep on another forum...

"We really don't have many returns on the 2XL and 3XL lines. All the returns I've seen have been from underpowering them"

Reps are not always the smartest people in the world.
-Cody

only126db
10-31-2008, 12:14 PM
Reps are not always the smartest people in the world.
-Cody

You got me on that one, most I talk to dont know jack isht.

I tossed this out there just as a jab....

I honestly couldn't say whether this is fact or fiction on the underpowering, there is so much back and forth on the subject.

I wish I had the test equipment to be able to do the testing myself and prove the outcome one way or the other.

I generally tend to get an amp rated higher than my subs just due to the fact that music does not generally contain a flat non fluctuating signal as the signals used to determine/verify rms on subwoofers. (pink noise)

A signal producing 50% power and 200% peak power evenly equals 100% average which could be recognized as rms.

A 100watt rms sub getting 50 watts with 200 watt peaks evenly = 100rms, now if your amp is rated @ 100 watts and just barely makes that mark, with a supply voltage drop(if) you wont even hit that mark, but have a good chance of having crappy sound.

However if you have an amp rated to do 150 rms with the voltage drop and everything else you will have the ability to provide your sub with the needed power and have some extra for those musical peaks.

(The wattages above are just for illustration for ease)

MacLeod
10-31-2008, 10:52 PM
I think we're all heading to the same place but taking different roads and maybe the problem we're running into here is defining "underpowering" and "overpowering".

It takes double the amount of power to increase output by 3 db which is generally the least amount that is audible so if you take a 100 watt speaker as an example, a 90 watt amp aint underpowering nor is a 120 watt amp overpowering.

So when I say "overpowering" Im talking about using at least 200 watts on that 100 watt speaker and when I say "underpowering" Im talking about less than 50 watts.

Now, you take that 200 watt amp and although it only amounts to a measly 3 db in audible output, its DOUBLE the amount of thermal energy that the voice coil now has to dissipate. So if youre not careful with the volume control, that 200 watts will build up enough heat in the voice coil to melt it.

Now take the 50 watt amp and put it on the 100 speaker. Now 50 watts aint much and you can run out of clean power really quick. So you crank on the volume a little more to get some extra grunt and WHAMMO! Youre amp is now clipping and shooting out around 120 watts. Now 120 watts is more than our speaker is rated to handle BUT its not a whole lot more and the voice coil will have a better chance of cooling. So while you are more likely to clip the 50 watt amp, it generally will be easier on the speaker than if you were steady pumping in 200 clean watts during a spirited listening session.

This is why I generally recommend using an amp that is rated the same as the speakers. Youre not really going to get any more output from a 100 watt amp over a 75 watt amp so the chances of clipping will be the same. Also youre not going to really get any more output going with a 125 watt amp so youre not more or less likely of clipping it.

Jstas
11-01-2008, 02:08 PM
Clipping is not that simple. There is much more to it than just a power surge.