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Factory Speakers Ohm Rating?

rez

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 14, 2005
Messages
440
Location
champaign,illinois
Does anyone know what the front (door & dash) speakers are rated at, or if there are any aftermarket solutions that would allow running all upgraded front speakers without having to rewire the speakers to an external amp?

Ideally, I would like to find aftermarket speakers rated the same as the factory ones for a simple upgrade. I like having four speakers up front and just want a sound quality upgrade, not a boomin' system. I'm not fully opposed to rewiring with an aftermarket amp, I'm just wanting to keep it simple. I'm running an ordinary sony head unit with upgraded rear speakers and factory fronts.

Hit me with your suggestions.
 

misterfixit

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 4, 2004
Messages
1,596
Location
Midlands, UK
all 4ohm, no?

Rich
 

rez

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 14, 2005
Messages
440
Location
champaign,illinois
When I was searching I found a couple of posts that said you can't just drop in 4ohm speakers in the dash and doors or you will most likely blow your head unit. Another said to run a power amp that can handle a 2ohm load. So my guess is they are not 4ohm. I could be wrong.

Anyone else?
 

atc250r

Staff member
Joined
Sep 11, 2003
Messages
13,235
Location
Orange County, NY
Yeah, they are 8 ohm so that when two are run in parallel you end up with a 4 ohm load. You're best bet would be to get pair of good speakers for the doors and leave it at that. The other option is to get a set of components (I believe the doors take 6 1/2") that come with a crossover, put the door speakers in with the stock wiring, run the low/mid off the crossover into the stock connector and run a seperate pair of wires to the tweeters which you'd place in the dash where the stock 3.5" speakers were.

John
 

Put a non polarized capacitor (stinger part# sbass4 or "bass blocker") inline with the positive speaker leads on your dash speakers. This will cause the head unit to only "see" the 2 ohm load at higher frequencies, and won't cause any trouble.
 

iceman69510

Turn Right Racing
Staff member
Joined
Mar 5, 2001
Messages
10,964
Location
Michigan
I'm not an audiophile either, but I found a great sound improvement replacing the doors (5.25") first. Course it didn't help that they were basically deteriorated to the point of dust when I took them out and touched them. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 

rez

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 14, 2005
Messages
440
Location
champaign,illinois
Quote:
Put a non polarized capacitor (stinger part# sbass4 or "bass blocker") inline with the positive speaker leads on your dash speakers. This will cause the head unit to only "see" the 2 ohm load at higher frequencies, and won't cause any trouble.



I really like this idea as long as your positive it won't cause any problems. Thanks for the suggestions guys!
 

Armitage

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 16, 2003
Messages
715
Location
Herndon, VA
I replaced the door speakers and the rear deck speakers but completely removed the dash speakers. I used all the factory wiring. Is there a built-in crossover in the front speaker wiring? I've never gotten good sound out of my front speakers but perhaps it's just because of the placement in the doors... Using an aftermarket head unit of course...
 

Rausch

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 21, 2004
Messages
12,049
Location
Cleveland, OH
you should run new wires to the front speakers straight to the head unit. i believe the factory wiring seperates the signal for the fronts, but i'm not sure how....you may not be getting full signal to those speakers.
edit: it looks like both fronts are tied together for each side. i wonder if the wiring still passes through the factory amplifier? i would imagine it would not if the factory radio is out. but i don't know exactly how it's wired, other that the din cable that is supposed to go the the amp...
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Quote:
Quote:
Put a non polarized capacitor (stinger part# sbass4 or "bass blocker") inline with the positive speaker leads on your dash speakers. This will cause the head unit to only "see" the 2 ohm load at higher frequencies, and won't cause any trouble.



I really like this idea as long as your positive it won't cause any problems. Thanks for the suggestions guys!



It won't cause any problems. I have worked in car audio for over 10 years.
 
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