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amp grounding


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CraigC 
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Posted: June 02, 2003 at 1:57 PM / IP Logged  
I have a 92 bmw 535 and was wondering where the best place is to ground the amp??? I am getting engine noise. I have tried about 5 different places and still the same. can I hook up the ground to the batt. and will that get rid of my engine noise, since the batt is under the rear seats?
bberman1 
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Posted: June 02, 2003 at 2:33 PM / IP Logged  

The best place to ground it would be to the chassis as close to the amp as possible. You never want you ground cable to be more than 18 inches long. But most likely the problem is not your ground. What kind of noise are you getting? Is it a high pitch whine that increases and decreases with the engines rpm's? Also how did you run all your wires (speaker, rca and Power) what side of the car are they on? Also can you tell us all the equipment that you are using?

luxuryrules 
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Posted: June 02, 2003 at 7:00 PM / IP Logged  
If I might interject, I've heard about ground cable length before, the same thing about not being longer than 18".  Why is that?
bberman1 
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Posted: June 02, 2003 at 7:31 PM / IP Logged  
The longer the ground the more resistance.
mobiletoys2002 
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Posted: June 02, 2003 at 7:33 PM / IP Logged  
the reason is that you dont want to add resistance to the wire by having it too long if it was to have resistance the amp would lose voltage or create noise or both.When adding an amp you want them to have the same ground potential as the battery and the factory location of a batteries ground is usually about 12 inches or so so any loner may cause problems. 18 inches is pretty much just an estimate of how long it should be after all 18 inches is almost always plenty to ground.Basically when hooking up anything in a car you dont want added resistance especially in amplifiers.
CraigC 
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Posted: June 03, 2003 at 12:34 AM / IP Logged  
I am running a jvc 4 channel amp for my mids and a alpine v-12 for my subs. I have a 1 farad stinger cap.  I am running 0 guage pos power wire and about a 10 guage ground wire that is about 2-3 feet long, there isn't much to get a groung from or can I use a self tapping sheet metal screw????
wvsquirrel 
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Posted: June 03, 2003 at 2:20 AM / IP Logged  
Use a self tapping screw and make sure the chasis metal is bare (no paint, corrosion, carpet, etc).
0 gauge seems a little excessive. But your ground should always be the same gauge as your power (if not larger). So if you're running 0 + then you should be running 0 -. You can use a distribution block to combine your grounds into one, just like your power wires but reversed.
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ShLeY_wOb 
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Posted: June 04, 2003 at 8:33 AM / IP Logged  
I tried to hook up my amp today its sum oldschool AMA amp 600watt one. just a no brander till i get a good deal on a good one. but i hooked all the wires up (not to the amp yet just to the car). the positive power to the bolt on the positive terminal on the battery. (Not the battery post but the screw that holds the positive clamp on the battery, duno if this is correct.) then i grounded the negative wire to a piece of frame that connected onto the chassi of the car so i didnt have to drill. then i went to hook up the power to the amp and it sparked and then started to smoke. anyone help me. i got no idea aiy. i bought the amp kit from a shop. the power cables are both 6 gauge cable and there is a fuse n everything so i really havent got a clu as to y it would do this.
wvsquirrel 
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Posted: June 05, 2003 at 9:25 PM / IP Logged  
Did you hook the ground to the amp before you hooked up the positive? If you did, then that was more than likely your mistake. By hooking up a ground before the positive you are allowing the circuit to be completed as soon as the positive comes close enough to arc to the connection point. The arc causes smoking, poping, etc because it is not a "constant" connection yet. Always hook up the positive first, then the ground!
Another way to be safe is to remove the inline fuse at the battery while hooking up the amp. With that fuse removed, you will not have a "hot" wire being hooked to the amp, so you don't run the risk of any arc. Once the positive is hooked up, then the fuse can be reinstalled into the holder/cradle near the battery.
Squirrel
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ShLeY_wOb 
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Posted: June 05, 2003 at 11:24 PM / IP Logged  
I tried to hooking up the positive first and then the ground wire but it still arked up pretty bad. but there was no smoke this time which is a plus. i didnt remove the inlive fuse. (the amp is pretty old and dodgy i dont really care if it gets f**ked cause i am getting another one soon) but it shouldent ark should it.
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