
I have been a bit slow on posting reviews of the last couple of Rca Patch, but it is time to catch up
Static in speakers after I amp them, what is problem?
Someone said it might be a bad ground. What do I check for if by chance if it is a bad ground? Also, someone said my RCA Patch cables may be too close to my +12v wire. I now switched patch cables to run the other side of my truck. Do you know if I have to wire and amp all of my speakers in order to get them Rca Patch all to work? Maybe they all need to be balanced.Because right now I am only amping my front 2 4x6 speakers.BTW, I am running patch cables on opposite sides of car than the power wire, but all of the speaker wire that I have hooked up so far is pretty much touching or almost touching the +12v cable. Is this ok or should I find a different spot for them? Such as running along side of the patch cables?P.S. As soon as I disconnect both of the + / - wires so it is wired in, but not amped, it doesn't have any sound coming from those speakers. But if I turn the radio or my car off and turn it back on, without it hooked up to the amp, it works fine!Please help I will award ten points easy to best most detailed answer!
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a VCR would easily do this, just get one that has a TV tuner in it. the only problem is that you would use the VCR to change stations not the TV (the TV would most likely just be used for video). and they are so cheap now, you could go to a thrift store a pick one up for $5. After that the VCR will output audio and video on RCA plugs, put the red and white to your spiffy audio setup and take the yellow to the back of the TV (also you could use the coax to hook your TV back up)
they are not very big speakers for a 400w amp I hope you have a lot of them there won’t be as much bass as would be ideal. Use ultra pure copper cables rated above what you need and get gold plated connectors, save money on the cables and the buzzing and hum will drive you crazy, depending on what you are going to be playing and how loud the engine/exhaust is it might not matter at all
Is this a brand new patch? If so, it could be that there are thousands of others downloading the same thing at the same time and the servers can’t handle any more people trying to get in.
Equalizers are generally placed in line before the amplification stage. This allows you to EQ everything going to the speakers. If you just want it to work on the reel-to-reel, you just put it between the reel’s Line Out and the receiver’s Tape In. It can also be used to EQ signals on the reel’s input, but I’m guessing you don’t want to EQ while you record.
Any box will do for flea market speaker. Good luck with what you purchased, I hope it all works. Never heard of any of those brands. If your amp has a 15 amp fuse on the side, you probably got ripped off
The problem with heavy stiff cable is that sometimes RCA connectors do not stay on very well and the stiff cable may cause damage to the connector on the piece of equipment or it may just fall off. A lighter, flexible cable works best for RCA cables.A heavy stiff cable is harder to bend and sticks out more behind your equipment shelf.
Your right to know that you’ll loose your sound. I ain’t putting down your equipment, NAD does make decent receivers. Maybe an upgrade is in order. Then you’ll have far more flexibility to get more sound & better quality. What you have is dated & very limited in terms of what it’s purpose is. Those pre-outs are for an external amp that has more power. If you hooked a sub to it, the sound wil be bad.
The color of the cables makes no difference at all. You’re splitting a mono signal into two mono signals, so the cable color doesn’t matter. Go ahead and use whatever cable colors you can find.
From what I understandVideo goes directly from the Console to a TVAudio goes directly from Console to a PC sound systemNo wonder you have delay issues. Audio and video are processed by two different processors and the Video path is much shorter than the audio path. Check if you do any fancy audio processing (pseudo surround, etc.) then try to get the simplest possible sound and see if that helps. IN most cases, it is video that lags, so audio receivers can add delay, but in your case it is the reverse. Check also if by accident you added some audio delay in the setup of the audio system.
YOUR RIGHT SPEAKER IS WRONG ,switch the wires + – and plug both rca jack again it will be a lot louderDont tell me that the color of the cables are correct and they are plug ok ,, just do it switch that speaker only