Quote:
Originally Posted by speedfreak28
I would run separate power and ground for the RE-q and see if this solves the issue, make sure wherever you have the amps and re-q grounded is bare metal contact. a bolt may not be good enough. Can you get a pic or 2 of everything?
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Both you and bigaudiofanat are correct. The noise is probably caused by a ground or a power wire. Sometimes you hook up something and get engine noise. A lot of people think that it is automatically a faulty unit. This is usually not the true case. It is were the power is coming from and how it is getting to the unit that usually has a noise in the power wire. In your case Bigaudio is right you should not of had the power wire hooked up tot he dis block. It should be hooked up to a wire in the fuse block or behind the head unit. Getting power directly from a power wire coming for them engine bay has tons of interference in it, that your re-q probably amplified. I also think that you should put it back in. The re-q dose so much more than your line converter and the boes is still messing with the signal before your amps are getting it. That is why you are saying that you are only hearing a bit better sound quality and not a lot. Keep up the good work bigaudio and I can see that speed know some stuff as well. Glad you know each other big and speed.