Mount your Amp to your Sub Box? This May Happen - Gladen 3000W Quick-Fix
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
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I am amazed everytime I see you work. Great job
I think box flex is higher now than 20 yrs ago.back then we didnt run the power we do now.subwoofers are higher performing as well.i can see vibration Killin electronics with a 2k amp bolted to a sub box ..
If I saw this come in with the board burnt to shit I'd tell them to piss off 😂 you my friend love a challenge and every time I watch you videos I wish you lived in Australia cos I'd never go anywhere else.
the finish on these videos is perfect
That speaker cone certainly moved of that amp. Great work
Always amazing work. Should this be covered by manufacturer warranty
to many people building weak enclosures these days. With drivers well over 50lbs and multiple kw of power handling these days, a single layer of unbraced 3/4" isn't going to handle it XD.
I make it rain! 🤣
I fucking lost it. 😂😂
The box is the less vibrating thing in my car. If the box flex it not built right.
If ur box is flexing u have a super cheap box and neeed a new 1
I bought these little rubber washers that are really tall and I use those to mount my amps
Solid box and isolation feet for the amps people 😊.
Dude your the goat of amps!!!
Sam!!! When you get time do another live for your live stream guys🙂🙂🙂🙂we are missing the live content!!!!!
I bought a broken Zapco with vibration damage. The circuit board by the fuses burnt. I used copper repair trace, 1.5 times the large foil width. Going to test soon.
Hii i need your help.....i have a monoblock kenwood 9105D am get some bass problems on that the its get dropping
Just a piece of wood to hold that board down and good to go. 👍🏻
would rubber or wood reduce board flex better?
3:03 Tell me more about making the board with holes burnt in it look nicer. lol jk. Been loving the repair vids.
I've been mounting amplifiers to subwoofer boxes for over 35 years. In 3 and a half decades, I've never had one fail because of that, ever.
Good boxes do not flex but prefab can and prefab often lack enough glue
It's never a matter of IF it will fail, it will always be a matter of When it will fail. Not mounting the amp to a box, while simultaneously mounting it to a surface that also does NOT flex or vibrate like a poorly built box does will exponentially decreases the odds of it happening.
@@OpSic66 most of my amps are over 25 years old. I still have my Alpine, Linear Power, PPI, Orion, and HiFonics, and they all still work perfectly.
So no, sorry, you're wrong, mounting an amp to a subwoofer box won't cause it to fail.
@michaelbloom5342 I've done it too, must confess. But I build OUTSTANDING enclosures, as you must also, because you have not experienced amplifier degradation either. That's what separates us Superior box builders from the common masses. We know how to build sub enclosures proper!!!
Oh, and, yeah I read there that you got some Ear Candy! One of my all time favs, Linear Power!!!!
Ive mounted amps to enclosures many times over the past 30 years. Never once had one fail from vibration. I never use a cheaply made prefab and i never mount the amp directly to the enclosure. Hell ive never even blown a sub or amp in my life. Knowledge and proper installs matter.
I've always said it you're amazing good job good job.? Is it hard to change the RCA outputs to Tiffany style on a TARAMP 15k ?
Good question. BUMP
My head hurts....
Well electronics are sometimes more difficult to repair than the actual designing of its circuit board!
Hey man do you have a design schematic for a Rockford punch 1000 X5? I grabbed some dirt bags for my mom and one had a lil water and dripped onto my amp opened it and it was a couple of the power supply transistors but they exploded and can’t read what they where. And haven’t found any schematic for this amp online
NEVER give a dirt bag a ride for free bro, that's why they're dirt bags!!! Ain't worth it
🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼
Sub mounting isn't really the issue cheap construction is I've had loads of active subs last forever because the built in amp was good build quality like alpine who just fit a normal car amp on the box under a metal mesh cover, last forever
Ugh yeah I don’t think the vibration on the box is gonna be worse than anywhere else in the car. Everything in the car vibrates from bass. I’d love to see someone find a way to test the vibration on the box vs elsewhere.
True. I think if a box is built solid with bracing the amp would be better off mounted to the box. I have my amps mounted to 3/4 birch on the back wall of my truck and it vibrates a good bit
This is a hard topic to explain, but you have air pressure and then you have panels that vibrate due to the air pressure. As you move away from the speaker the air pressure or energy wave reduces.
The key to amp mounting is to put it on a panel that is not vibrating due to its resonate frequency being higher than the sub. This is hard to explain.
So the amp itself is very stiff and is difficult to flex. Its usually a large block of aluminum. So you want to mount the amp to a panel that does not flex. If you look at a sub box the flat sections tend to flex, but the edges do not. All 6 edges of the sub box will be quite rigid while the middle of the panels flex. Attach the amp to the edges of the box. Raise it slightly away from the vibrating section of the panel. If the amp is not long enough to reach the edges, mount the amp to a wood panel and then mount the panel to the edges of the box.
@@JasonWW2000 that's why I said a solid box with bracing. My box is the least thing to vibrate in my truck but I can't mount the amp to it under the seat so I'm stuck mounting it to the back wall. The birch I have on the back wall is mounting with three tubes of silicone so it's one with the truck but still vibrates some.
@@fusion82 Regardless of whether the box is solid or braced, the 6 edges won't vibrate. Don't let the amp touch any part of the box except for the edges.
In your application see if the edges of the panel vibrate compared to the middle. The back cab sheet metal is really large and susceptible to flex. If the panel edges (left and right sides) are noticeably more solid you can mount a second wood panel over the first with an air gap in between, maybe 1/4". Only mount the second panel to the edges of the first panel. The air pressure in the cab will expand and contract all walls and doors so the second panel should not feel that pressure.
Of course it depends on how much flex you have now. If the current mount has just the tiniest flex at high volume it will probably be fine. If its a lot and your worried, try the second panel I described. Hopefully the subs or port are not aimed directly at the amp because that will cause it to vibrate for sure.
@@JasonWW2000 I know that. What I am saying is anywhere on my box has less vibration than anywhere else in my truck.
How do you get off that black tar/silicone? (in this video you can see it holding down the big wires new the transformers)
Keeps us in business!
I can promise you that mounting to the box is in fact worse. It might still get some vibration mounted somewhere else, but it will get the most mounted to the source of said vibration.
The 6 edges of the box don't vibrate.
My box has the least of said vibration in my truck. Box is built like a tank
@@fusion82 Cool. Every box is different though. Only thing in common is that the edges don't vibrate.
Thanks.
Ive seen amps start on fire for less i never put my amp on my box and for all the nay sayers E.A.B.O.D.😂😂
Melt 5 sticks of hotglue on that transformer. The board will fall apart before the transformer 😂
No! Hot glue has no place in an amp that will get to over 60-70C internally 😂
Silicone is best. Just remember might had to repair this amp again. So don't over do it
Try decaf bro
He plays lots of decaf.
I see people from bassheads on a budgey made their way into tje comments