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Why Mid-Woofers Won’t Work Well in Small Speaker Enclosures

Speaker Enclosures

Dash pods, kick-panel enclosures and sealed enclosures in doors might look cool, but they aren’t always an ideal solution for a speaker that will attempt to produce bass. In this context, when we talk about bass, we are discussing audio frequencies below about 300 Hz. In this range, most drivers with a cone diameter of 4 inches or more can play down to around 125 Hz or lower. If the enclosure used with the speaker is too small, you’ll end up with unwanted distortion and limited low-frequency extension.

Modeling Speaker Behavior

Anytime a speaker will be used at frequencies below 300 Hz, we need to ensure that there’s enough air volume behind the driver so as not to affect the overall system compliance. In a sealed enclosure, air acts as a spring. This spring adds to the compliance of the speaker to form a high-pass filter. Yes, we have the benefit of increased physical power handling, but we trade bass output.

For this example, we’ll use a 6.5-inch midrange driver that’s been designed for infinite-baffle installations in the doors of a car or truck or on the rear parcel shelf of a sedan. The graph below shows the driver’s predicted frequency response in an enclosure with an air volume of about 3 cubic feet. This enclosure is large enough to simulate an infinite-baffle installation.

Speaker Enclosures
The predicted frequency response of our typical 6.5-inch midrange speaker when installed in a door or rear parcel shelf.

In this application, the driver’s -3 dB point is acceptable at 89.15 Hz, and the system has a Q of 0.672. Both calculations indicate that this mounting location will work superbly when combined with a subwoofer.

Small Speaker Enclosures

What if someone who doesn’t have experience using speaker modeling software decides they want to install this speaker in a pod in the kick panel of a car or, worse, on the vehicle’s dash? Let’s be generous and assume this pod has an internal air volume of about 2 liters or 0.07 cubic feet. What happens to the frequency response of our mid-woofer?

Speaker Enclosures
The yellow trace shows us that our woofer system now has a peak at 236 Hz and that the low-frequency output is dramatically reduced.

Our enclosure modeling software shows a peak of 4.5 dB at 236 Hz. The system Q has jumped to an unruly 1.605. Equally troublesome is the fact that bass output has been reduced dramatically. This small pod has choked the woofer, and it’s now producing 10.3 dB less output at 90 Hz.

Can We Fix This With an Equalizer?

To the uninitiated, it would seem that applying some equalization might fix the problem. If we keep the volume levels low, we could theoretically add some low-frequency equalization to compensate for output at 90 Hz. With that said, we’ll need to send almost 11 times as much power at 90 Hz for the same amount of output in a properly-sized enclosure.

Unfortunately, while we can tame the peak at 235 Hz, we can’t eliminate the resonance that caused it and the associated distortion. When the cone assembly’s mass, the compliance of the suspension and the compliance of the air in the enclosure interact, there’s a frequency where a small amount of input produces a disproportionally large amount of output. We call this the resonance frequency.

The Qtc value describes the size of the resonance. When looking at Thiele/Small parameters and calculating a driver’s behavior and an enclosure, the Qtc, or Total System Q tells us how prominent a peak in response is. It’s a unitless number in SPL, but software like BassBox Pro or Term-PRO can offer an accurate prediction.

Speaker Enclosures
This graph shows our speaker’s response in enclosures with Qtc values from 0.7 (red) to 1.6 (grey).

In most cases, we want to keep the Qtc value under 0.8 or maybe 0.9 to limit distortion. These suggested limits apply to woofers in speaker pods as well as subwoofers in their enclosures. If you want your music to sound tight and controlled with no resonance or ringing, then choosing a large enough enclosure is crucial.

Pick the Right Speakers for Your Application

Suppose the audio system design for your vehicle calls for relatively large mid-woofers (4 to 6.5 inches) to be mounted in an enclosure. In that case, it’s paramount that you work with the shop to make sure the enclosure will be large enough or to pick a low-Q driver. As a second example, we model the behavior of a 6.5-inch woofer with a Qts of 0.48 in the same two enclosures.

Speaker Enclosures
While bass output is still reduced, the Qtc of the system remains well below 0.7, and as a result, the combination of the speaker and the enclosure produces a smooth response with very little resonance and distortion.

Why Midrange Distortion Is Objectionable

If you were to talk into a real-time audio analyzer, you’d find that most male voices have the majority of their energy focused between 100 and 1000 Hz. If there’s any emphasis or distortion through this range, voices will sound unnatural and unbalanced.

Ultimately, designing a car audio system upgrade requires that the Product Specialist and installer you are working with balance speaker size with the available mounting locations in your vehicle. If a pod needs to be built, you may find that a smaller speaker will deliver a smoother frequency response with less distortion. It’s counterintuitive, but that’s just the way it works.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Amazing Audio and Accessory Upgrades for Your Chevrolet Corvette

Corvette Upgrades

Since 1953, the Chevrolet Corvette has been an icon in the North American automotive industry. These two-seaters represent value and performance with styling that always lets them stand out from the crowd. Try as General Motors might, there’s still room for improvement, even on a flagship vehicle like this. Let’s look at some of the upgrades available to improve the performance of the audio system in a Corvette and accessorize the vehicle to make it more functional and look better.

Corvette Audio System Upgrades

Whether your Vette came with an analog radio mounted on its side (a la C2) or a touchscreen multimedia receiver in a C7 or C8, the audio system performance in these cars has never been something to write home about. Thankfully, the aftermarket is here to support your quest for superb sound with hundreds of upgrade options.

Companies such as Custom Autosound Manufacturing and RetroSound offer twin-shaft radio designs that will work with your C1 through C3 Vette. These radios include a modern digital AM/FM tuner, Bluetooth and SiriusXM satellite radio compatibility when combined with an SXV300 tuner module. A USB port will let you connect your iPhone or use a USB memory stick to digital audio files. Best of all, these radios include preamp outputs that allow your installer to add high-power amplifiers to bring your music to life.

Corvette Upgrades
RetroSound offers its Long Beach radio in a design specific to the unique mounting requirements in the C2 Corvette.
Corvette Upgrades
Custom Autosound has Corvette-specific solutions such as this CAM-CVVE-740. You can play MP3, WAV and FLAC digital media files from a USB memory stick or stream music from your smartphone over Bluetooth.

For C4 through C6 Corvettes, the options for radio upgrades increased dramatically. Chevrolet used a more conventional design that paved the way for hundreds of radio upgrade options for music enthusiasts. The latest generation of floating-face radios are prime candidates for adding Apple CarPlay and Android Auto to your sports car.

Corvette Upgrades
The Sony XAV-AX8000 is a single-DIN multimedia receiver with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. An 8.95-inch display sits in front of the radio chassis and can be adjusted to match the dash contour.

If you have a C7 Vette with a Bose audio system, you can upgrade the vehicle with high-quality amplifiers and speakers using a MOST radio interface such as the M650-GM from NAV-TV. This interface will extract a full-range audio signal from the digital connection between the radio and the factory amplifier. This signal can be fed to a digital signal processor and your choice of an amplifier to create an amazing audio system.

Corvette Upgrades
Power and control are the hallmarks of the ARC Audio PS8-50 eight-channel DSP amplifier. Equipped with 50 watts of power per channel and a full suite of tuning functionality, it gives your installer everything he or she needs to create an impressive audio system.
Corvette Upgrades
The M650-GM from ZEN Audio and NAV-TV will let your installer add your choice of digital signal processor, amplifiers and new speakers to make your C7 Vette sound great.
Corvette Upgrades
The Rockford Power-Series T3652-S component set features woofers with liquid crystal polymer fiber cones and a motor design with an integrated aluminum shorting ring to reduce distortion. This audiophile-grade speaker set also includes a pair of 1-inch silk-dome tweeters.
Corvette Upgrades
The Audio AP F8.9 bit is an eight-channel amplifier with an integrated digital signal processor. The amp features a host of integration options that make it easy to add to almost any factory-installed audio system.
Corvette Upgrades
The M Four DSP from Helix is a four-channel amplifier with an integrated 10-channel DSP. The amp can easily power the speakers in your car, and the processed outputs can drive a subwoofer for great sound.

Add a Subwoofer for Great Sound

If you’ve been a reader of BestCarAudio.com for any length of time, then you’ll know that adding a subwoofer to your car is easily one of the best bang-for-your-buck upgrades you can make. Corvettes can most certainly benefit from better bass response.

Corvette Upgrades
If you have a C7 and want to add a subwoofer, the PAC APSUB-GM61 interface is for you! The interface works with the radio and amp data connection to extract a signal for a dedicated subwoofer amplifier.

Of course, you’re going to want a subwoofer solution that works with your vehicle. JL Audio offers several Stealthbox vehicle-specific solutions that are exclusively designed for the Corvette. These fiberglass enclosures are molded to fit the contours of your car perfectly. The result is excellent bass in a solution that installs in about an hour.

Corvette Upgrades
The JL Audio SB-GM-C7CP1/10TW3 Stealthbox is designed for 2014 through 2019 C7 models. The enclosure features a single 10-inch subwoofer and is finished in a durable gray carpet that perfectly matches the interior.
Corvette Upgrades
The AFG-112CORV-D is a fiberglass subwoofer enclosure designed for 2005 through 2013 Corvettes. With an internal air volume of 1 cubic foot and a subwoofer mounting depth of 6 inches, it works great with a variety of 10-inch subwoofers.

Park Safely with a Backup Camera

If you’re having a multimedia receiver installed in your Corvette, ask about adding a backup camera. With their low seating position and relatively high rear bumper, Corvettes can make it difficult to see what’s behind your car. If you aren’t changing the radio, you can always have the rearview mirror upgraded with a unit that includes a color display for a camera.

Corvette Upgrades
A backup camera is a great way to see what’s behind your car when parking or maneuvering.

Sound Deadening Makes Driving Comfortable

If you are using your Vette as a daily driver, then you might want to consider having the doors, floor and hatch area treated with a layer of sound deadening. This butyl material absorbs sound energy and makes driving quieter and more comfortable. If you use Bluetooth hands-free systems or a smartphone integration technology like CarPlay or Android Auto, having a quieter car will make your voice easier to be heard.

Corvette Upgrades
Audiomaster in Austin, Texas, treated the doors of this Corvette with a layer of SoundShield sound deadening to make the car more comfortable.

Radar Detectors and Laser Defense

Who would buy a Corvette only to drive it slowly? If you find you have a bit of a lead foot, you might want to inquire about having a radar detector and laser defense system installed. Radar detectors are available in portable units that are great for quick installation and transportation from one vehicle to another.

Corvette Upgrades
The Redline 360C is one of the newest portable radar detectors from Escort. This unit offers amazing radar sensitivity and uses advanced filtering and GPS to help eliminate false alarms.

For the ultimate protection solution, consider a custom-installed radar detector and laser defense solution. The biggest benefit of a custom system is the availability of laser defense technology. As more and more police forces equip their officers with lidar instead of radar, you need laser shifters to help prevent tickets.

Corvette Upgrades
Ralph’s Radio in Vancouver equipped this Vette with a custom-installed Escort MAX Ci radar detector and laser defense system. The display for the MAX Ci was integrated into a custom housing on the steering wheel trim piece.
Corvette Upgrades
Adrenaline Autosound in Clayton, North Carolina, installed an AL Priority laser defense system in this Vette. The team built custom acrylic plastic mounts for the rear laser shifters.

Window Tint and Paint Protection Film

Having the windows of your car tinted offers three benefits. First, tint protects your skin from the harmful effects of the sun’s UV rays. If you spend a lot of time in your car, tint can help to prevent wrinkles, blemishes and, in extreme cases, skin cancer. The same properties that protect your skin also protect the fabrics, leathers, vinyl and plastics in your vehicle. Colors won’t fade anywhere near as quickly, and plastics won’t dry out and crack.

Second, window tint is a great way to help keep the interior of your vehicle cool. Tint films such as 3M Ceramic IR and Crystalline block 97% of the sun’s infrared energy. If you live in an area that’s hot during the summer, heat-blocking window film is a great investment.

If you care about how your Corvette looks, then window tint can dramatically improve the style of your sports car. A nice dark tint can be very dramatic.

Corvette Upgrades
Shops such as Precision Audio in Thomasville and Bainbridge, Georgia, offer heat-rejecting window film that can help keep the interior of your car cool and comfortable. This Corvette was tinted with Llumar ATR film.

Speaking of great looks, you may want to consider having your car protected with a layer of paint protection film. Also known as clear bra, this transparent urethane film applies directly over the paint to offer a layer of protection from stone and gravel chips, bug splatter and stains from road tar. While most installations focus on protecting the front bumper, fenders and hood, other areas that deserve attention are the rocker panels, doors, mirror covers, and the area around the hatch. If you take your Corvette to the track, protecting the rear fenders from gravel and rubber chunks thrown up by the rear tires is a great idea.

Corvette Upgrades
Ocala Car Audio in Florida applied 3M Scotchgard Pro to this 2020 Corvette to help keep it looking pristine for years and years.

Remote Starters Add Comfort

Another great option for those living in areas of the country that get painfully hot is a remote car starter. Though more commonly associated with freezing winter conditions, remote starting your car a few minutes before it’s time to go will let the air conditioning system start cooling the interior.

Corvette Upgrades
The PRO T13 remote starter system from Compustar includes a color LCD remote that offers up to 3 miles of range and two-way communication. The included Drone telematics system lets you control your vehicle using your smartphone from anywhere you have a cellular connection.

We know that your Corvette is your pride and joy. It’s important to protect it and keep it safe. If you’ve opted for a remote starter system, then ask about adding security features such as a high-output siren, a remote with two-way communication or a GPS tracking option that works with your smartphone. If your car is moved without your authorization, the tracking system will send an alert to your smartphone, and you can check its location and notify the police if necessary.

Corvette Upgrades
The Drone telematics system works with a cellular receiver in your vehicle and the DroneMobile app on your smartphone to alert you when the alarm is triggered, or the car moves.

Dashcams Add Protection

Whether you’re worried about how the drivers around you behave, or you want to keep track of who or what is prowling around your car when it’s parked, having a dashcam installed is a great upgrade. These compact digital video recording systems install on the front windshield of your car. If there’s an accident, fraud or just something amazing happening in front of your vehicle, you’ll capture it all on video. Many dashcams can be upgraded with rear-facing cameras, and many include GPS options and built-in accelerometers.

Corvette Upgrades
Dashcams such as the Mio MiVue 798 include high-resolution image sensors, a built-in GPS receiver to capture vehicle speed and location information, and an accelerometer that detects impacts.

LED Lighting Adds Fun and Safety

If you have an older car with incandescent headlights, drop by your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer and ask about high-performance LED replacements. Not only do LED bulbs put out significantly more light, but they are also more efficient. With less draw on your electrical system, the alternator will be happier. Ask the retailer you’re working with to spice up your Vette with some LED lighting. Headlight rings, such as those popularized by BMW, are a popular upgrade. Of course, multicolor LED lighting strips are a great choice for personalizing your engine compartment or footwells or for adding under-car lighting.

Corvette Upgrades
Mobile Edge in Lehighton, Pennsylvania, equipped this 1976 Corvette with LED lighting in the engine bay to highlight the swapped 6.2-liter LS3 V8.
Corvette Upgrades
Companies such as Diode Dynamics offer various LED rings that can switch between white and amber to add some style to your headlight assemblies.

Upgrade Your Corvette Today

Whether you’re driving a Corvette that’s fresh off the showroom floor, the car you had in college or a custom restoration, your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer has thousands of options to update your vehicle. Drop by today and talk to them about new communication technology, a better sounding stereo system or a lighting upgrade.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Should Your Car Audio Speakers Be Mounted in Pods?

Speaker Pods

Speaker pods and build-outs on A-pillars are becoming increasingly common in custom car audio installations. While some of these solutions look cool, the laws of physics can work against these cosmetic efforts to degrade the performance of your car stereo system. The subject of speaker installation could (and should) fill a book. In this article, we’ll look at the benefits and drawbacks of mounting speakers in a way that’s not flush with the surrounding surfaces.

Speaker Directivity

Before we dive into our discussion of speaker pods, we need to have a quick reminder about speaker directivity. At frequencies where a sound’s wavelength is below 1.75 times the speaker cone’s diameter, sound emanates equally in all directions. Crucial to this discussion is an understanding that the description “all directions” includes the area behind the speaker.

By way of an example, let’s look at a 2.5-inch midrange driver. Let’s assume for simplicity that the cone has a diameter of 2.5 inches. As such, a 5.4 kHz tone would have a wavelength equal to the cone’s diameter. A sound with a wavelength that’s 1.75 times the cone’s diameter would have a frequency of about 3.1 kHz. As we stated, sounds with frequencies at or below 3 kHz will radiate in a spherical pattern from the speaker’s center, including areas behind the speaker.

Speaker Pods
Below about 3 kHz, sounds produced by our theoretical 2.5-inch speaker radiate in all directions around, in front of and behind the speaker.

Sound Reflections Can Wreak Havoc with Your Music

Car audio system design combines a multitude of talents. The Product Specialist designing your audio system needs to have a firm understanding of the available speaker mounting options in your vehicle to create a speaker installation solution that will meet your expectations. The technician working on your car needs to know how to optimize each speaker’s performance in those locations to deliver measurably accurate performance. There’s no doubt that perfect execution is a combination of a thorough knowledge of the laws of physics and some artistic style.

Speaker Pods
Extreme Audio near Richmond, Virginia, created this amazing speaker installation in the A-pillars of a Volkswagen GTI. A 2.5-inch midrange and 1-inch tweeter are mounted behind the 3D printed and wire-mesh grille.

If you look at home speakers, you’ll see that each driver is typically mounted flush with the enclosure’s front baffle. This decision doesn’t happen by accident. Because sound radiates rearward from the cone, it will bounce off this mounting surface. All these reflections combine with the speaker’s energy directly radiated, and both signals eventually arrive at your ears. When the baffle is even with the speaker, the results are quite predictable and usually acceptable.

Speaker Pods
The midrange driver mounted at the top of the famous Morel Fat Lady speakers is flush with the mounting surface. The carbon fiber baffle rolls away smoothly to reduce reflections.

What would happen if the speaker stuck out an inch or two in front of the baffle? The sound reflecting off the baffle may not add to the sound coming directly from the driver at all frequencies. This difference in pathlengths causes cancellations at some frequencies, making the speaker system very difficult to calibrate with an equalizer.

Speaker Pods
When a speaker is mounted in front of a surface that will allow sound to reflect off it, the result can be less than ideal.

Calculation Frequency Response

Despite the belief that delivering great sound in a car or truck is magic, it’s easy to predict the frequency where reflections can become an issue in a car audio system. Imagine if a speaker pod is sitting 3 inches in front of your car’s windshield. This location results in the sound bouncing off of the glass traveling an extra 6 inches before it combines with the energy radiated directly from the speaker cone.

If we look for a frequency where one half of a wavelength is equal to our 3-inch distance, we find that at 2.26 kHz, the sound is one half-wavelength out of phase with the original source when it sums back together after reflecting off of the glass. At this frequency, the sounds will cancel each other out. The result is a notch in the frequency response of the system. This acoustic cancellation repeats at 6.7 and 11.3 kHz. Those last two will be inaudible as comb filtering at frequencies significantly above 1 kHz is difficult to perceive because the Q is of the notch is very high.

Speaker Pods
A comb filter is created when audio signals with different arrival times combine. This phenomenon makes it difficult to calibrate an audio system with an equalizer. This example shows a comb filter that starts at 400 Hz.

This phenomenon doesn’t just happen with midrange speaker pods on your dash. Without some compensation, differences in sound arrival times between the left and right speakers or front and rear speakers can produce the same effect. In home audio, placing a speaker so that the driver is 8.5 inches in front of a wall will produce the 400 Hz, 1.2 kHz and 2 kHz dips you see in the image above. The same thing happens at the frequency where sound created by the speaker bounces off of the floor and combines with the sound coming straight from the driver.

If you are working with a car stereo shop to design an audio system upgrade for your car or truck, it’s not difficult to minimize the effects of comb filtering by having your speakers mounted as flush as possible with the vehicle. Where there are front-to-rear or left-to-right pathlength differences, implementing signal delay or an all-pass filter in a signal processor from a company like ARC Audio, Audison or Audiotec Fischer can dramatically improve the way your music sounds. Placing your speakers in pods away from door panels, the windshield, side windows and the dash might not be an idea that’s as good as it seems.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Your Car Audio Amplifier Wants More Battery Voltage

Amplifier Voltage

If you’ve looked carefully at the specifications of car audio amplifiers for any amount of time, then you’ll know that some designs make more power when they are connected to a higher-voltage electrical system. This type of amplifier is called an unregulated design. In the simplest of terms, it multiplies the provided battery voltage by a fixed amount to power the amp’s internal components. If that sounds complicated, don’t fret. We’re here to spell out why these amplifiers like extra voltage.

What Is an Unregulated Car Audio Amplifier?

Before we talk about regulated and unregulated designs, we need to define what’s known as rail voltage. Car audio amplifiers, in general terms, work with five different voltages. The most basic circuitry that turns the amplifier on and drives the output stage runs directly from the feed from your battery. The second pair of voltages, usually plus and minus 15 volts, is used for the signal processing and output device driver circuitry. Lastly, there’s what’s known as the rail voltages. The rails voltages are key to determining the maximum voltage the amplifier can supply to your speakers.

As discussed in our recent article about amplifier clipping, the maximum undistorted voltage an amplifier can produce is based on the rail voltage. When you drive an amp with more input signal, the tops and bottoms of the waveform become distorted, and significant harmonic distortion is added to the output signal.

Amplifier Voltage
In the simplest of terms, the maximum voltage an amplifier can produce is determined by the rail voltage. In this example, our positive rail voltage is 24 volts (in blue), our negative rail voltage is -24 volts (in red), and our audio waveform voltage (in green) swings between these levels.

In a regulated amplifier design, the rail voltage is set to a fixed level that the amp attempts to maintain no matter what voltage is applied to the power terminals. If you’re sitting in a parking lot listening to music, your battery voltage may quickly drop to 11.8 or 11.9 volts. A regulated amp will draw extra current to maintain the target rail voltage. If you’re cruising down the highway, the alternator could easily produce 13.8 volts. In this case, the amp draws less current but maintains a fixed rail voltage.

In an unregulated amplifier design, the rail voltage is a function of the supply voltage. Let’s say the power supply produces +24 and -24 volts from a 12-volt feed, by way of an example. If the voltage drops to 11 volts, the rail voltage drops to +22 and -22 volts. If the voltage increases to 14 volts, we might have plus and minus 28 volts. This is a gross oversimplification of the process, but it gives you an idea of how things work.

Amplifier Voltage

The Power T1000X5ad five-channel amplifier from Rockford Fosgate uses an unregulated power supply design. Maximum output power increased by almost 30% when the supply voltage is raised from 12.6 to 14.4 volts.

Real-World Measurements

As with any technical subject, sometimes it’s better to look at a real-world example to more easily understand the concept. We dug up an older Class-AB stereo amplifier rated to deliver at least 80 watts per channel at 1% distortion when connected to a 4-ohm load and supplied with 14.4 volts.

Step 1 was to set the amp up on the bench and see how much power it makes with our supply voltages on their low setting. The D’Amore Engineering AMM-1 shows the amp could produce 74.5 watts per channel with a supply voltage of 13.58 volts.

Amplifier Voltage
The AMM-1 confirms our two-channel amp makes 74.5 watts per channel when supplied with 13.58 volts.
Amplifier Voltage
Here’s what the amplifier’s output looks like when driven to 1% distortion when supplied with 13.58 volts.
Amplifier Voltage
This is the spectral distortion graph of our amp at ~1% distortion when supplied with 13.58 volts. The amplifier is producing 18.12 volts of signal.

Just under 75 watts is pretty good power for an amp rated at 14.4 volts. The next step was to increase the power supply voltage to 14.38 volts and leave the input signal at the same level. Now, our amp is producing 81.1 watts, and distortion has dropped to an impressive 0.009%.

Amplifier Voltage
With a little extra supply voltage, our amp is now producing 81.1 watts of power.
Amplifier Voltage
With 14.38 volts fed to the amp, the clipping at the tops and bottoms of the sine wave is now gone.
Amplifier Voltage
With the signal clipping eliminated, the harmonic distortion added to the audio signal is dramatically reduced. The THD+N spec is an impressive -80.5dB or 0.009%.

With more rail voltage available, we can now increase the signal fed to the amp and further increase its power output until we reach a 1% distortion level again. Powered with the same 14.38 volts, the amp can now produce 85.3 watts. That’s more than 10 watts over the low-voltage level maximum output level.

Amplifier Voltage
The AMM-1 tells us the amplifier has enough rail voltage to produce 85.3 watts of power into a 4-ohm load.
Amplifier Voltage
At 1% distortion, the scope once again shows some clipping on the tops and bottoms of the sine wave.
Amplifier Voltage
Distortion is back to roughly 1%, but we now have 19.26 volts on the output.

Can We Correlate Amp Power with Supply Voltage?

It should be clear that when you have an unregulated amplifier in your car or truck, supplying it with as much voltage as possible allows it to make more power. I compared the power output of several high-quality amplifiers under different supply voltages. All made more power with more supply, but the ratio by which the specs increased varied from brand to brand. On average, one extra volt supplied to the power connections raised the maximum 1% distortion power output level by between 15 and 30%.

Knowing this information, the importance of having your amplifiers installed with large-gauge, all-copper conductors can’t be overstated. While there are places to save a few bucks when it comes time to get an amplifier installed in your vehicle, skimping on power wiring quality isn’t on the list. Drop by your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer today to find out what amplifiers are available to make your music sound amazing. And don’t forget: Make sure to feed them with all the battery voltage your vehicle can muster.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Keys to Proper Car Audio Speaker Installation

Speaker Installation

Over the years, car audio speakers have been installed in seemingly endless combinations of panels, pods and baffles. Some look great, some sound great and some offer both. Sadly, not everyone understands the physics involved in choosing the ideal installation locations for speakers. This article will cover a few of the vital installation criteria that need to be considered when your local retailer is installing new speakers in your car or truck.

Every Speaker Needs an Enclosure

If a speaker were set on a table and music played through it, you’d find it doesn’t produce any bass and very little midbass. This is because there’s a nearly equal amount of sound produced from the back of the woofer cone compared to the front. If you wrap your hands around the speaker, the performance improves. If you mount the speaker in a baffle that separates the two sound sources (front and rear), you’ve eliminated back-wave cancellation.

Speaker Installation
Bass and midrange sound produced by the speaker’s front and rear will cancel each other if the driver is not installed in a proper baffle.

Dash and Door Panel Installations

Of course, one of the most popular locations to mount a speaker is in the factory location in the dash or door of your car or truck in place of the speaker that came from the factory. This location typically provides excellent cosmetics as the vehicle retains its factory-like appearance. In many cases, such as a dash location at the base of the windshield, the speaker’s performance can be such that it delivers excellent frequency response throughout the entire listening environment.

Door Speaker Installation and Sound Deadening

If you have a speaker installed in a door location, your retailer may need to create a set of mounting adapters. A few factors need careful consideration during the design of these adapters. First, they need to be thick enough to ensure that the magnet assembly on the speaker’s rear won’t interfere with the window mechanism or glass. Second, the speaker’s front needs adequate clearance to ensure that the woofer cone can’t come into contact with the grille. Finally, the adapter needs to be made from a material that won’t be damaged by moisture. Most people would be surprised by how much water gets into the door when it rains or when a vehicle goes through a car wash. Common materials for speaker adapters include ABS and expanded PVC plastics. Wood is not a suitable material for use in the doors.

Speaker Installation
Extreme Audio near Richmond, Virginia, created a set of mounting adapters out of expanded PVC plastic to install new speakers in the rear doors of this 2014 Lexus RX350. They applied a layer of sound deadening to the door to serve as a gasket for the adapter.

Most modern vehicles have openings built into the interior skin of the doors. These openings allow technicians to service the door handles and window mechanism. Unfortunately, these openings also allow the sound from the speaker’s rear to mix with the sound from the front. The easiest way to improve the performance of a speaker mounted in a door like this is to add a layer of sound deadening. The dense butyl material and foam will seal the openings and dramatically improve your speakers’ efficiency and sound quality.

Speaker Installation
Perfectionist Auto Sound and Security in Anchorage, Alaska, treated the doors of this GMC 2500HD with a layer of SoundShield sound deadening material before installing new Morel speakers.

A Look at Speaker Pods and Enclosures

A common error we see in custom A-pillars and speaker pods is the use of an enclosure that’s too small for the chosen speaker. Even a 4-inch midrange that will play down to 125 Hz needs a certain volume of air in the space behind the driver so as not to affect the overall compliance of the system. If a speaker pod is too small, the system’s resonant frequency will increase and, beyond a certain point, so will the distortion added to the signal. Let’s look at a few examples.

It’s quite common to see 6.5-inch coaxial speakers mounted in small enclosures in an amp rack or subwoofer enclosure. Let’s look at a speaker like the BLAM Live-Series LW 165 C 6.5-inch coaxial speaker. Based on the manufacturer’s Thiele/Small parameters, the small sealed enclosure that would be acceptable for this driver would have an internal volume of about 0.3 cubic feet. This enclosure yields a system Q (Qts) of 0.707 and a-3 dB frequency of about 90 Hz.

Speaker Installation
Predicted low-frequency response of a single BLAM LW 165 C 6.5-inch speaker in a 0.3-cubic-foot enclosure.

Where we get into trouble is when an enclosure isn’t large enough. We recently saw a post where a fabricator crammed a driver similar to this into a pod that “was just big enough to house the speaker.” Let’s make this an extreme example and say the interior dimension was 5.5 by 5.5 inches with a depth of 2.5 inches. That’s a mere 0.017 cubic feet.

Speaker Installation
Here’s our 6.5-inch speaker now crammed into a tiny enclosure. There’s an almost 4 dB peak at 305 Hz, and the -3 dB point is now close to 190 Hz. The total system Q has a completely unacceptable value of just over 1.4. Not only would this sound terrible, but it would also be nearly impossible to blend into a subwoofer. Sadly, it happens all the time in cars and trucks and even more often in displays.

To prevent this, every speaker larger than about 2.5 inches in diameter should be modeled using enclosure simulation software to ensure that the planned enclosure won’t be detrimental to the system’s overall performance.

System Directivity

The last topic we’ll mention is directivity. Every speaker, from every brand and of every size, is subject to a phenomenon called directivity. In short, directivity describes how directional the sound of a speaker is. At relatively low frequencies, the sound created by a speaker radiates in a sphere from the cone.

Speaker Installation
At lower frequencies, sound emanates in all directions from a speaker.

As frequency increases, all speakers become more directional. The frequency at which this starts to happen depends on the diameter of the speaker cone. The chart below indicates (in green) maximum frequencies that radiate evenly in all directions. Frequencies in the red zone are only audible directly in front of the speaker.

Speaker Installation
Directivity behavior of different size speakers based on frequency.
Speaker Installation
Every speaker from every company experiences a certain amount of directivity.

Knowing about directivity, it’s important to choose speakers that will sound good in your vehicle’s available locations. For example, a component speaker set with an 8-inch woofer and a tweeter that only plays down to 4 kHz may not deliver good audio performance between 3 and 4 kHz if the listening position isn’t directly on-axis with the speaker. If you can add a midrange driver to the system, you may be better off choosing a 6.5-inch set.

Car Audio Speaker Installation Is Crucial

As you can see from the above, working with an experienced specialty retailer is vital to your car stereo system’s performance. Unlike buying home stereo speakers, where the crossovers and enclosures are designed in a controlled environment, car audio installation experts have to use their knowledge and training to create a speaker system from scratch. The tools and training they offer can be the difference between music that sounds realistic and an audio system plagued by distortion and poor frequency response.

Lead-In Image Credit: Musicar Northwest in Portland designed these enclosures to house a set of Morel tweeters in the doors of this 2009 Ferrari F30 Spyder.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

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