This right here was a dead give away. My GB10s are rated 100w but they are no where near 100w they get loud and but no where near make "your ears bleed"
This right here was a dead give away. My GB10s are rated 100w but they are no where near 100w they get loud and but no where near make "your ears bleed"Imagine how much treble energy would be blasting (compared to remaining freq spectrum) before they blew if your scenario was correct.
tweeters in the pillars and dash locations they can nearly make your ears bleed without breaking a sweat. After the first 2 or 3 sets blew,
Good eye/catch/reading. I just can't imagine someone enjoying listening that loud. If the vehicle is used for doors open SPL shows, okay, but not sitting inside for any SQ purposes.This right here was a dead give away. My GB10s are rated 100w but they are no where near 100w they get loud and but no where near make "your ears bleed"
Maybe he's running 4k to his subs?Right? But I think the dude is running big sub power so maybe he needs it to keep up. 🤷🏽♂️
Not quite. But they are ported.... 😃Maybe he's running 4k to his subs?
Sub amp is a DS18 KO3 3k running either a single ported Ampere Audio Neo 12”, a ported B2 Rampage 12”, 3 B2 Audio Rampage 8”’s ported or his new as of last week Rockford T2 13”
I hate when people say literally. But....regardless of how well you think you installed these tweeters, and set the gains and crossovers, they are blowing for 1 reason, too much heat on the voice coil. Raise the XO point, increase the slope, and turn the gain down.
I thought about that too, i think its not him, but someone with a similar mindset.Who's remembers koontz
neither this vehicle or the one I did before that I was taking about get played at unusually high volumes but because they have the ability to play higher than the average SQ fan would need points to the problem I guess? Or it’s the fact the dude likes ported boxes and has a big sub amp? I’m learning new stuff all the timeGood eye/catch/reading. I just can't imagine someone enjoying listening that loud. If the vehicle is used for doors open SPL shows, okay, but not sitting inside for any SQ purposes.
Gain knob doesn't work that way. It's not a volume control. Should have used the DMM method with the oscilloscope for the tweeter. Then still turned it down several db at the DSP. Aftert that play music at "full tilt" volume then either turn it up or down at the DSP depending on the desired output. Tweeters don't need alot of power. Then if you are tunning to a curve they'll use way less.Amp gains were right at 1/4 for the tweeters and 3”just over half for the 7” channels. I copied this from Hertz “power rating, 180W Peak (Hi-Pass filtered @ 1,8kHz - 12dB Oct.) which is why I felt going twice as high as the 1.8k with double the slope should be plenty safe, but apparently combining those settings with the amp being pegged at 25% I need to put my tools away forever and never install tweeters again….
You must have missed the part where I checked them with a scope at the setting they were at, about 1/4 up from minimum, and the first time any signs of distortion or clipping showed up was at or a little above 3/4 to max level. I have set up every system that I’ve done for myself or someone else the same way unless the customer specifically wants something set different, but I normally set them back far enough that the volume can be maxed out with useable sq still. Some guys like to get to 75%, I’ve done several for a guy who I know already that he wants his to be maxed at 1/2 volume. He is the one I’ve been trying for 10 years to understand that lower settings sounds better and cranking up the gains don’t add power.Gain knob doesn't work that way. It's not a volume control. Should have used the DMM method with the oscilloscope for the tweeter. Then still turned it down several db at the DSP. Aftert that play music at "full tilt" volume then either turn it up or down at the DSP depending on the desired output. Tweeters don't need alot of power. Then if you are tunning to a curve they'll use way less.
But cranking the gains does add power...You must have missed the part where I checked them with a scope at the setting they were at, about 1/4 up from minimum, and the first time any signs of distortion or clipping showed up was at or a little above 3/4 to max level. I have set up every system that I’ve done for myself or someone else the same way unless the customer specifically wants something set different, but I normally set them back far enough that the volume can be maxed out with useable sq still. Some guys like to get to 75%, I’ve done several for a guy who I know already that he wants his to be maxed at 1/2 volume. He is the one I’ve been trying for 10 years to understand that lower settings sounds better and cranking up the gains don’t add power.
I'll go ahead and say it again. Gain knob is not a volume knob. You can have it clipping and maxed out at minimum if enough input voltage is applied. You obviously did something wrong and continue to do so every time a tweeter is poped.You must have missed the part where I checked them with a scope at the setting they were at, about 1/4 up from minimum, and the first time any signs of distortion or clipping showed up was at or a little above 3/4 to max level. I have set up every system that I’ve done for myself or someone else the same way unless the customer specifically wants something set different, but I normally set them back far enough that the volume can be maxed out with useable sq still. Some guys like to get to 75%, I’ve done several for a guy who I know already that he wants his to be maxed at 1/2 volume. He is the one I’ve been trying for 10 years to understand that lower settings sounds better and cranking up the gains don’t add power.
Don't listen to these guys (They clearly aren’t trying to help you). Pop a couple sets of these in and report back. 4 per pillar should give your client the highs he’s after.You must have missed the part where I checked them with a scope at the setting they were at, about 1/4 up from minimum, and the first time any signs of distortion or clipping showed up was at or a little above 3/4 to max level. I have set up every system that I’ve done for myself or someone else the same way unless the customer specifically wants something set different, but I normally set them back far enough that the volume can be maxed out with useable sq still. Some guys like to get to 75%, I’ve done several for a guy who I know already that he wants his to be maxed at 1/2 volume. He is the one I’ve been trying for 10 years to understand that lower settings sounds better and cranking up the gains don’t add power.
If you are interested in trying to get it to stop: use a multi meter at the output of the amp to make sure the output voltage of a 0db tone is low enough the amp CANT overdrive the tweeter. When you set the gain using an (edit) oscilloscope what was the output voltage of the tone you were using? Was it playing at 0db? And what frequency was that at?You must have missed the part where I checked them with a scope at the setting they were at, about 1/4 up from minimum, and the first time any signs of distortion or clipping showed up was at or a little above 3/4 to max level. I have set up every system that I’ve done for myself or someone else the same way unless the customer specifically wants something set different, but I normally set them back far enough that the volume can be maxed out with useable sq still. Some guys like to get to 75%, I’ve done several for a guy who I know already that he wants his to be maxed at 1/2 volume. He is the one I’ve been trying for 10 years to understand that lower settings sounds better and cranking up the gains don’t add power.