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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/07/17 in all areas

  1. It will! you did it right so i am sure you will be pleased!
    1 point
  2. Typically rubber grommets will not stop anything from happening, unless your using an isolate type mount (meaning the bolt that connects to the wood amp rack is not the same bolt being connected to the amp). Otherwise the vibrations will travel through the fastener itself. The rubber needs to be very very very soft as well or else it wont absorb any vibration, and even then if its a violent system it still may not do anything.
    1 point
  3. Holy mother of Jesus that looks good! You are gonna notice huge gains with all that effort! Hats off to ya for doing it right.
    1 point
  4. Damp pro B-stock and Overkill Pro on the floors. Gonna keep piecing the scraps throughout on the bare spots tomorrow. Three sheets of Luxury Liner Pro cut to size/shape. after that I put the (unfortunately) old carpet back in. So the front half of the floor is done. Tomorrow I'll cut the other three sheets of LLP to shape for the back half and lay the carpet back down. Put the door panels back up with some scraps of CCF/MLV attached after that, and begin to re-run the wires that go under the carpet before I put the seats and trim panels back in. Maybe I'll have it done by the weekend. My leave is up, so I'll only get to work on it in the evenings after work, and it gets dark quick. Thanks for looking
    1 point
  5. but but but if you wire the amp at 1 ohm, that means it plays at 1 ohm and you get all that claimed power at 1 ohm.... there is no such thing as impedance errr box rise because they used ratchet straps to hold the box down........ which makes me wonder. if square woofers put out square waves, does that mean rectangular amplifiers put out rectangular waves? is the only way to get round unclipped waves to use a round woofer and round amplifiers? mind = blown
    1 point
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