Those stereos require more power so you when to run the positive wire on the back of the stereo to the battery and the negative wire on the back of the stereo to somewhere wheee you can ground it
@@streakyogee8206 same sequence on our van, the sound cuts out when it volumes to 39, we cannot turn it up to 60, we know that it has a potential to go on higher volume but it just cut out
it happens to me as well but with a bluetooth receiver. i have it hooked up to pam8403 amplifier and it is powered by a 18650 battery with xl6009 boost converter set to 5v. what could i do to fix it? it only happens when i increase the volume on the 50k pot that I'm using.
You need more amperes, or amps. Like an old cellphone charger rated at 1.5 amps takes all day to charge a new phone meanwhile a 2 amp does it faster and the 5 amp ones get it done in no time. Volts is volts, amps is the strength of the current being sent
I'm kind of having the same problem and I can't seem to find anything on RU-vid to help me solve the problem but when I turn the volume up more than halfway it shuts off and it is an after-market radio amplifier and subs. Any suggestions?
@@bertof5455 no. Leave the red or acc to the key. So the radio switches on and off like it should. The yellow should be 12 constant or power wire. That's per industry standards. You can wire both of them together, you will have to manually shut the radio down. (The off button) in that situation. The power wire (yellow, 12volt, memory) only keeps your settings and stations and the clock going so you don't reset all that every time you turn your radio on.
@@anicetomaldonado thanks bro I really appreciate you responding back to me and taking time out of your day to respond. I will try what you texted me thanks
979sunny in my case my head unit wasn’t getting the proper amount of power bc i had a chime module that went to factory harness, long story short ran my power wire straight to a fuse (wiper fuse) fixed the problem
Does it do that in the winter? My head unit overheats and restarts in the summer and takes a while in the winter . This only happens when I turn it all the way up.
Allow me to introduce a new unit of measurement for sound volume, which I call vovol* (abbreviated: volume voltage). THIS IS HOW IT WORKS: You use two pre-stages, one with positive volume values, and the other negative. For example, so has the pre-step with positive values a measurement from +0 decibels up to +20, while the one with negative values, has from -0 decibels down to -20 decibels. The highest voltage occurs when the value is +20 and -20 decibels (or: 20 vovol), while there is low voltage, when the value is on +0 and -0 decibels (or: 0 vovol). You can possibly also combine two different values with each other, by adjusting the value to +10 -20 vovol, which gives a crisper effect. Have experimented with this myself at work and at home. The adjustment can of course be set to taste. More information about Vovol: When the sound has high volume voltage, the speaker membrane is stretched like a guitar string, so that the sound becomes more sharper, realistic and noise-free. This can be achieved by using an equalizer with a preamp. First, all frequencies are lowered, to, for example, -12 decibels. Then you raise it up to +12 decibels, with a preamp. This is how I usually experiment, with vovol, because currently there are no tools, or apps, to do this. If you, or other who reading this, have an equalizer with a preamp, I think you should try it too. And thank you all for reading! :-) Great video!
@@marcogarcia6056 Nope. Smh. I am going to take the car to a shop to take a look. I also think that some speakers may not be able to handle music turned all the way up. It could be the system's way of protecting the speakers from blowing out if too much volume. Maybe?
You need more amps you probably have enough voltage, remember voltage is the pressure of the electricity but amps is the rate of which it flows you can have enough volts but too little amps. This could be cause by the speakers not being the correct ohms to the stereo or wiring issue
i have this problem on my lexus gs300 factory radio when i go above 18 on the volume it shuts off and then come backs on but have to lower the volume to keep listenning the radio someone help me