the head unit never turns itself off.. on 1-2 days when the temps were like 10-15 deg audio would cut out but as soon as the vx was warmed up that went away
the clipping im talking about sounds a bit like static but with a rhythmic pattern
the head unit never turns itself off.. on 1-2 days when the temps were like 10-15 deg audio would cut out but as soon as the vx was warmed up that went away
the clipping im talking about sounds a bit like static but with a rhythmic pattern
Ok,so since there's no sign of potencial damage you should check the wiring harness.
But i got one question ....
Is this noise audible when you playing Cd's or the radio stations ?
nope its very faint.. you cant hear it except between songs or when the sound is turned down to a 2-3 setting (normal listening volume is 10, highest ive ever gone is 20, max on the unit is 30) sometimes im not even sure that im hearing it until i cut power to the head unit and i hear the silence, if i turn the input level on the amp up it gets louder
Is this a relatively new amp? Say, within the last eight years or so? I hadn't heard of any audio equipment being impacted, but I have had other consumer electronics die from bad capacitors. Wikipedia calls it "Capacitor plague".
A conventional multimeter might not read well. I think you need one of those "True RMS" ones to get accurate readings with AC signals. I'm not sure, though. I'm the wrong kind of techie.
Finally, I have heard a tick-tick-tick sound coming from a car before, that sounded a lot like a CD skipping. We were at about 13,000ft, and an electrical storm came over. We were bleeding static out of the air through the antennas. Each 'tick' was a spark jumping to ground.
Ok,try this one.....
Turn on the CD player with the ignition key in ACC position,go ahead & play CD and/or radio station,keep the a/c heater off
If so far you don't hear that noise then turn on the a/c heater.
If you still don't hear any thing then turn on the parking lights,if nothing is heard keep going by turnning on the head lights.
Jump inside & close the doors,if nothing is heard open the door;What we looking is for any possible open/shorts in the electrical system
If you hear that noise at this point then is more likely something related to ground connection,check all grounds for any loops
But if this noise is only audible when the VX's engine is running you can drive by any audio/auto shop and search for some weird electrical issue,can't be a big deal,possible is an draw of electromagnetic field waves.
As how i said,if you are familiar with an multimeter tester go ahead a check the speaker's wiring ohm/voltage.
Apply the same step with the RCA cables & subwoofers wires,Check all wiring related to the audio/video system.![]()
only get the sound while driving and even then its still occasional 95% of the time its not even there at idle, seems to be just low speeds (but not in park or neutal) , but could be because at high speeds wind noise drowns it out.... doesnt come from the subs at all, only the surround speakers
yea its a new amp, purchased new in november or december
my new thinking is its probably got to do with the fact that my head unit is located directly above the ECM, so RCA cables come out behind that, then go down and run down the center of the passenger footwell to avoid any source of interference, they are too long so they do loop, probably 1 foot in diameter and then cross at a 90 degree angle before continuing to the amp.. its really not a huge issue.. just a minor annoyance after putting much time and effort into my sound system, i was hoping to fix it before the new components go in (fiberglassing new tweeter pods started today)
Eric,
Does the amp drive all of the speakers or just the sub? It sounds like the midrange speakers might be driven with bass. A crossover network may solve the problem or even a simple high pass filter.
Tom
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Put a smiley after you say that Bub.
yea its a 5 channel amp, have a high pass filter on the fronts and not sure whats on the rears but its on a "rear speakers" setting
I now believe that what you have been dealing with is a electro magnetic feed back waves.
The ECM it self emits those waves but since the RCA cables are quite close & carries the signal processed by the head unit they might have being "receiving" those waves from the ECM.
Try to place those RCA cables on the opposite side,if you have the means $$$$$$ have those cables upgraded,the twisted or braided RCA cables works better for this kind of situations.
Hope this one works for you buddy![]()