If the amplifier is not working and/or going into Protection, follow these steps to diagnose the problem.
- Is the power light for the amp on? If not, check all fuses on the circuit. If the fuses are good, check the ground wire to ensure it hasn't come loose. If power and ground are proper, place a multimeter acrosss the power and ground terminals from the amp to ensure you have at least 12V DC . If not, inspect the power and ground wire for breaks. If there are no breaks in the wire then remove the amp from the vehicle and test bench it. If a test bench is not available you can put scrap wire on the amp for power, ground, and remote, then connect it directly to the vehicles battery(*1). If the amp doesn't come on at this point then it is faulty.
- If the amplifier is going into protection, turn the amp off and then remove the speaker wires from the amp. Turn the amp back on and then reinspect.
- If the amp no longer goes into protection, test the speakers with a mutimeter for ohms, and inspect the wires for shorts. Make sure the ohm load of the speaker(s) is not lower than the amp can handle. Example, if the amp states 2 ohms max, make sure the speaker(s) is not 1 ohm.
- If the amp still goes into protection, turn the amp off and then unplug the input connections (whether RCA or speaker level input). Turn the amp back on and see if it's still going into protection(*2). If it still goes into protection refer to step 1.
If the amplifier works yet has a hissing or static noise, follow these steps to diagnose the problem.
Turn the gain on the amp down to 0 and then reinspect. If the noise goes away, the gains are set wrong. If the noise is still present, unplug the input connections and then reinspect(*2).
- If the noise goes away, then a test source must be connected to the amps RCA inputs. A mobile phone with a Type-C headphone adapter along with a 3.5mm to RCA adapter will work perfectly for this test, but anything with a clean RCA output will suffice. If the noise is not present, the radio or OE radio adapter must be inspected.
- If the noise doesn't go away, then the output of the amp must be checked with a test speaker. Any 4 ohm or 8 ohm speaker will suffice, even an OE speaker. Remove all speakers from the amp and then put the test speaker on any channel on the amp.
- If the noise goes away, the speaker wires, speakers, and any passive crossovers must be inspected.
- If the noise doesn't go away, remove the amp from the vehicle and test bench it. If a test bench is not available you can put scrap wire on the amp for power, ground, and remote, then connect it directly to the vehicles battery(*1).
- If the noise is no longer present, redo the amp ground and then reinspect.
- If the noise is still present then the amp is faulty.
*Note 1: Use caution when making connections directly to the battery to avoid shorting the wires out.
*Note 2: If the amp is using speaker level in and GTO for turn-on, you must connect power into the Remote In on the amp for this test.
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