Ok, so I completed the install of the 420 (well sort of). My friend and I worked efficiently with the time available to us over the last 2 nights (about 2.5 per night) to get everything in. We took our time and tried to do everything right.
When I fired it up, the very first thing we noticed was the fuzz coming from the speakers. At first, I thought it was just coming from the tower speakers, but I was wrong. The tower speakers were more noticeable than the deck speakers, so you had to stick your ear to a deck speaker to hear it.
I turned the volume all the way down to zero and turned the volume down on the 420...still had fuzz. We double checked and adjusted the RCAs, etc. and still had fuzz. Re-routed the power/ground runs for the 420...still had fuzz. I turned the gains down on the tower speaker amp as low as they would go and it cut the fuzz down considerably, but not completely. The gains were not that high to begin with (about half way). Turned the gains back up to where they were and fuzz went back up accordingly.
We then unhooked the 420 and put everything back as it was to see if we originally had fuzz and just didn't remember (but I knew this was impossible). Surprisingly, we still had fuzz, but at a MUCH MUCH lower level. So the fuzz was always there, but i apparently just didn't notice it.
So, my hypothesis is that I have noise in my system and the 420 just amplified it in a big way. I'm not positive what's causing it.
A: Is this the "noise" created by not having the head unit powered and grounded directly to the battery?
B: Is this the type of interference noise created by power runs too close to speaker wire or RCAs?
Sigh. After two long nights, lots of scrapes, and $$, I feel quite defeated.
Any advice is appreciated. Off to lick my wounds now...
When I fired it up, the very first thing we noticed was the fuzz coming from the speakers. At first, I thought it was just coming from the tower speakers, but I was wrong. The tower speakers were more noticeable than the deck speakers, so you had to stick your ear to a deck speaker to hear it.
I turned the volume all the way down to zero and turned the volume down on the 420...still had fuzz. We double checked and adjusted the RCAs, etc. and still had fuzz. Re-routed the power/ground runs for the 420...still had fuzz. I turned the gains down on the tower speaker amp as low as they would go and it cut the fuzz down considerably, but not completely. The gains were not that high to begin with (about half way). Turned the gains back up to where they were and fuzz went back up accordingly.
We then unhooked the 420 and put everything back as it was to see if we originally had fuzz and just didn't remember (but I knew this was impossible). Surprisingly, we still had fuzz, but at a MUCH MUCH lower level. So the fuzz was always there, but i apparently just didn't notice it.
So, my hypothesis is that I have noise in my system and the 420 just amplified it in a big way. I'm not positive what's causing it.
A: Is this the "noise" created by not having the head unit powered and grounded directly to the battery?
B: Is this the type of interference noise created by power runs too close to speaker wire or RCAs?
Sigh. After two long nights, lots of scrapes, and $$, I feel quite defeated.
Any advice is appreciated. Off to lick my wounds now...
Comment