Autosound 2000 Cd Set Download
Fine Tuning Your Car Audio System You have finally hooked up all your sources, processors, amplifiers and speakers. Now it is time for one of the most critical aspects of the installation: Fine tuning your system (tweaking). Tweaking is a very long process, especially if you have many channels of amplification.
Take your time to get everything set for optimum performance. Professionals take days, even weeks to set a system up. Get rid of noise Make sure your system is 100 percent noise free (see the 'alternator noise' section for more help). Check speaker polarity To make sure all your speakers are in phase, unhook the speaker you want to test at the amp (both wires preferably). Using a 1.5 volt battery (any size), touch the positive terminal of the battery to the positive wire going to the speaker, then do the same for the negative wire.
Tarang Serial Durga more. Have a friend look at the speaker. If the speaker pops out, the polarity is correct. If the speaker pops in, the speaker is hooked up backwards (out of phase). To fix this, simply reverse the wires when hooking the speaker back to the amplifier.
A word of caution here: DO NOT hold the battery power to the speaker for more than 1 second, all you want to do is to see if it pops in or out. You will damage the speaker if you hold constant power to it.
Do not use a higher voltage. Also, do not try this test on tweeters, you could fry the voice coils. If there are crossovers with capacitors along the line, this test will not work (capacitors block DC voltage). Bypass the caps momentarily.
AutoSound 2000 CD-103 CD103 • 'My Disc' Audiophile Reference Series Test Disc for Critical Evaluation of Audio Components The Sheffield/A2000 Test CD#103 'My Disc AutoSound 2000 CD-102 (CD102) High Frequency Test CD, Software Specifically Designed for the Set-up and Evaluation of Sound System Imaging. Custom Autosound® Usa-1 Radios Master Corvette. 30 Pre-Set Stations. IPhone, Android, MP3 Player, Satellite Radio, CD Player, Or Other Devices w/1/8'.
A much more elegant and quicker way to do this is by using a commercially available polarity checker, which uses a test CD. All you have to do is pop the CD in the head unit and hold the polarity tester in front of each speaker. The advantage here is that you can test for absolute polarity of the system on all the speakers, including tweeters. Polarity checkers are available from various companies such as Monster Cable. Retail for the Monster Cable polarity checker is about $120. Sometimes, when speakers are not mounted close to each other (i.e., mids on the doors and tweeters up in the dash), reversing the polarity on tweeters or mids makes the system sound better because it makes up for phase differences due to distance. Try different combinations and see what sounds better.
Get a clean signal The third step is to set all your sources and processors 'flat'. Turn the loudness off. Set the bass, mid and treble controls on the radio to 0. Set all EQ bands to 0dB. Defeat all bass and treble boosts, etc. Set the gains on all the amps and processors to the middle.
Balance and fader should also be in the middle. By now your stereo should sound pretty good. If not, check your installation. EQs are not designed to compensate for installation flaws.
Setting Gains for max. Power and min.
Distortion Start with a high level signal at the first components of the chain. This will reduce noise and give you more headroom. Try to start with a head unit that has a high voltage signal.