A little off max? I dunno if most people should have the gain near half (I realize it varies from amp to amp), let alone past it... but that's one of those crazy things I think.
I never heard that before. That actually sounds really complicated.Gain should be adjusted to match the headunit voltage anyway.
This means your amp is set wrong for your electrical system. Tune better.The interior lights dont dim when it hits only the exterior(fogs, headlights, etc).
Sell it to some other schmuck.I have a bass knob inside the car so it can be adjusted up and down independently.
I never heard that before. That actually sounds really complicated.
The only part that is complicated is knowing where your actual knob is set, and what your radio voltage is without having the manual. I looked mine up online, it's 2 volts. On my amp there is a range for the gain "knob" that says 6v on the left and 0.2 on the right. If it turned it halfway it should be roughly at 3.1, so i turned mine about 3/4 to the far right.
:th_scratchhead:
Voltage... does not... remain constant... ? This... science... no. *twitch*
I never heard that before. That actually sounds really complicated.
Try an oscilloscope and report back. Not kidding.Usually you won't have clipping unless your gain is maxed out.
I have no experience with this. Sounds silly to me, but I've been humbled a number of times here. Can you post some research materials for this?Also, the HU voltage and level/gain voltage is just a sensitivity level. So on my radio, 2V Pre-out sensitivity, and I set my amp to roughly 2V input sensitivity. Make more sense?
You are only correct in a way that I do not believe you intend. Your amp may come with a chart of Voltage output recommendations based on speaker type and wiring. A 4Ohm setup will need a different output than a 2Ohm setup.You best bet is to see what your amp and speaker manufacturers recommend.