assuming they did it right, thats not a bad looking install at all...definitely not a "rats nest". They could have it tuned to a very front stage (which i like) and the rear fill can be very low.
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
assuming they did it right, thats not a bad looking install at all...definitely not a "rats nest". They could have it tuned to a very front stage (which i like) and the rear fill can be very low.
That being said, the immediate change that needs to be made is grounding the zen directly to the battery.
There you go!agreed. thats why i ran 4 gauge power and 4 gauge ground to the battery
agreed. thats why i ran 4 gauge power and 4 gauge ground to the battery
You need to get power and ground directly from battery with the zen. I assure you. It even says it in the manual and NavTV will tell you the same thing. As far as not providing enough signal to amps? That’s not a remotely possible consequence of utilizing a direct power and ground connection from the battery. It’s not even possible. The zen is very sensitive. You need the lowest resistance possible for it to work properly and quietly.
You should also be grounding your amplifiers directly to the battery for the same exact reasons.
assuming they did it right, thats not a bad looking install at all...definitely not a "rats nest". They could have it tuned to a very front stage (which i like) and the rear fill can be very low.
Tesa tape can easily hide what’s really there. And they used ALOT of it. Although, I’d give them the benefit of a doubt that they did things right. Hopefully they used the pac A2B harness making the entire assembly plug and play without touching the factory harness. That being said, the immediate change that needs to be made is grounding the zen directly to the battery.
agreed. thats why i ran 4 gauge power and 4 gauge ground to the battery
I assume I should put a fuse in line for the ground as well, right?
_.
I am sure you know this but make sure the ground wire you run is the same size as your power wire.Understood. Will certainly be addressing the grounding requirements first for both units.
Thanks for the confirmation. As stated, I wasn't sure if the grounding or power input could possibly be related as I'm much less versed on audio components. After digging through all sort of threads, this seemed like a good opportunity to verify with some of the gurus on here.
Very true - was a bit of an exaggeration. Was speaking more so to the unknown underneath the excessive wrapping. It seems to have been done by a shop, so I also defer to it being right, however the current state would indicate something's changed.
Unfortunately it doesn't appear to be an intentional staging configuration as, when it does work, the sound is symmetrically distributed. I don't receive sound out of the driver side set or rears other than occasional crackling. I had thought this was poor wire connections, but pulled everything apart and found secure soldered joints.
Great - I'll do a bit more digging to see if I can un-hide the proper harness to verify. Start by changing one variable at a time and get that ground straitened out.
I had actually saved your thread as reference for exactly this reason. Going to feed a 4 gauge right alongside the existing positive as you appeared to.
I assume I should put a fuse in line for the ground as well, right?
_____________
Thanks all for the info. I'm going to see where that takes me.