Inksta wrote:Cheers, I'll bear that in mind
Actually I have a question for you.
When I first booted it all up, I had the amp's gain set to 'MIN'. This was just too quiet (had to put the headunit to max volume on the highway to hear conversations properly on the radio). I now have the gain set to halfway between MIN and MAX and it sounds about right (the headunit's max volume is '60' and with this level of gain I don't think I'd ever go much further than '40'). Is it normal to have to set the gain higher like that? Before installation, I had assumed the gain would be set low or minimum, given that the headunit is putting out 5 volts, the amp is bridged for 200 watts x 2 channels, and the speakers are rated at 75 watts.
As this is my first proper car stereo I'm unsure what is normal.
Hmmm, hard to say as I haven't used passive splits in a very long time. Active systems tend to go louder because you dont have passive crossovers soaking up half the power.
Still though, 200w going to your speakers should be plenty enough to drive even a passive set veryyy loud. I only have 4x70 or so right now (2x70 to tweeters, 2x70 to mids) and at max volume it's very loud, to the point where the doors are rattling like crazy from the midbass.
I always set up my systems with all amplifier gains down as far as they will go. Amplifer gains are essentially input sensitivity, so the higher your gains are set the more electromagnetic interference or 'noise' you will have going through to the speakers. I find that at higher gain levels the added colouration is quite noticable.
Some amps are rated more conservatively then outhers. My Helix is old-school, so even though it's only rated at 4x60 this is rated at 12V...that translates to more like 85w per channel at the normal 13.8V. Some brands overrated certain amp models for marketing appeal (they claim more power then they actually produce) but Focal are a brand with a good reputation - I'd imagine they'd be accurate with their ratings.
Are you talking roof on or off? I haven't gone roofless for a while, but when I do so at high speeds it's always a struggle to have the system heard!