Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi, i have 2 800w alpine amps in my boot (one for subs, one for speakers)...when i bought the car there was a noise coming from the front drivers tweeter, when a bump was hit the noise would disappear.

The noise is a static crackle, that is constant. I also found out it was coming from my door speaker, checked the crossover boxes, they are fine.

Ive only noticed this noise coming from drivers front speaker, i changed the wring in the amp to the spare set (rear right) (rear; dunno y the back two are paralleled into left rear; like this when i bought) temporarily, and it worked fine. Then those terminals also played up, so they are now temp paralleled with the left fronts. So atm all my speakers are left. Which is no good for my speakers.

Is the problem in the amp, or could it be the wiring. If amp can it be fixed without buying a new one??

Cheers,

Julian

Edited by 3340TH
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/169077-static-in-the-speakers/
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Lamb roast on Saturday will be different 🥲
    • They are under bucket shims. Tomei provides a test shim kit and then any measurement of shim required. 
    • I always wondered how you were supposed to buy a set of 24 buckets and somehow magically have every single one of them yield exactly the desired clearance. I would have thought you'd need to assemble a cam with either 12 "sample" or "example" buckets of known top thickness (or a single such sample/example 12 times over!!) measure clearances at every valve, and then do the usual math to work out what the actual "shimness" of each bucket needed to be, before buying the required buckets to make up he thicknesses that you didn't have on hand.
    • I now seem to be limited in power due to my rev limit/hydraulic lifters in my built RB25. I'm looking into converting over to Tomei solid lifters. Question for anyone that has done the conversion. I was always under the impression that when using the Tomei solid lifter conversion, you would also require new valves (Longer or shorter stems, I can't remember which).  I don't know where I got this idea, as so far I see no mention of this in any of the Tomei documentation. It just states I need the Tomei solid buckets, solid lifter cams and upgraded springs. As my head is already built, all I would need is another set of 1000$ Kelford cams, 500$ buckets and about 4H hours of my time installing and I'm off to the races!?!? There's no way it's that simple, I must be missing something? 
    • I couldn't agree more. I should have started from the get-go with a NEO or solid bucket conversion. I started looking into converting over to solid lifters yesterday. Now for some reason I was always under the impression that when using the Tomei solid lifter conversion, you would also require new valves (Longer or shorter stems, I can't remember which).  But I see no mention of this on any of the Tomei documentation. It just states that I need the Tomei solid buckets, solid lifter cams and upgraded springs. As my head is already built, all I would need is another set of 1000$ Kelford cams, 500$ buckets and about 4H hours of my time installing and I'm off to the races!?!? There's no way it's that simple, I must be missing something? 
×
×
  • Create New...