Simple amp and speaker install.....advice appreciated
Simple amp and speaker install.....advice appreciated
Author
Discussion

campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Tuesday 16th September
quotequote all
I've got a mk1 Renault Twingo which I'm looking to upgrade the audio in, but really not sure what to order. It's only a tiny car.

Currently it has 100mm speakers on the dashboard, and 130mm speakers in the door panels. You can get 165mm speakers in the doors, which is what i'd like to do.

I'm going to leave the original headunit in place, but not use it. Source will be my phone, linked to a JL Audio MBT RX V2 bluetooth receiver. This has lineouts which will go to an amplifier.

What I need help with is speccing the amp and speakers.

Would I be ok with pairs of coaxial 10cm and 16.5cm speakers fed by a 4 channel amp? Or would that be a bit light?

Would I better with a small subwoofer too, and if so, would that need a separate mono amp, or do I just run all 4 front speakers together from 2 channels and bridge the others for the sub?

Any advice would be really appreciated.

defblade

7,877 posts

231 months

Tuesday 16th September
quotequote all
It's unlikely from similar set-ups I've seen that you'll be able to decently seal the dash speaker locations, so I'd forget about them - although you could consider mounting the tweeters there if you get a set of component fronts.

Loads of deadening inside the door - on the back of the outside body panel, try and seal any/all gaps behind the door cards. Mounting the speakers well is a big chunk of the battle for good sound. Anything you can hear outside the car is wasted energy.

Then I'd go for a small sub if there's room.

A 4 channel amp is the simplest solution if you can find one that matches your speakers (I think I'd start by identifying the sub/box I was going to use, that'll give you the RMS bridged wattage you're looking for from your amp, then you can choose front speakers to suit the power provided by the amp's single channels as there's loads of choice there)

What you buy then depends on your budget.

Watch out, the shopping list can get expensive if it's your first install and you need to buy wire (chunky battery/earth supplies), fuses etc as well to get it all installed. Getting speaker wires into the doors is a PITA and I've never worried about just cutting into and using the OE stuff, but others will disagree (I'm not pushing massive wattages)


Massive power is not required if you choose carefully - My car currently has one approx 70w/channel amp feeding the fronts, and a 200w sub. It's nicely balanced and you can't hear yourself talking/singing if you turn it up rofl

Post your amp/sub/speaker ideas on here and I'm sure we'll be constructive wink

gmaz

4,964 posts

228 months

Wednesday 17th September
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Consider an underseat sub if it will fit. Your twingo's boot is probably small enough without a sub enclosure in there!

https://caraudiocentre.co.uk/products/in-phase-usw...


campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
Thanks guys.

My original thought was these 10cm speakers in the dash.

And either of these in the doors, 16.5s would be more work to make fit.



All powered by this amp.



But now i'm not sure!

campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
I already have this to pair my phone to, and plug into any amp.

TEKNOPUG

19,958 posts

223 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
You need 165mm components. Don't bother with the 10cm dash speakers. You might be able to mount the tweeters there but they usually work best on the dash or on the A-pillars. Amp choice will depend upon the subwoofer - which will depend upon how much boot space you want to lose. You might want to consider a bass-tube or similar if you think that you will need to remove it frequently. It's critical that the amp has high & low pass filters for all channels, as you have no way of controlling the signal via your phone.

Installation is everything, as has already been stated. Budget at least £100 just for install parts. If you need speakers rings (mostly likely) get them in HDPE, not MDF.

campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
I'd discounted the idea of components because I really want to avoid having anything non factory looking, like tweeters on the a pillar. Hence the coaxials.

The JBL amp has both high pass and low pass filters.

Edited by campionissimo on Wednesday 17th September 21:00

TEKNOPUG

19,958 posts

223 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
campionissimo said:
I'd discounted the idea of components because I really want to avoid having anything non factory looking, like tweeters on the a pillar. Hence the coaxials.
Mount the tweeters in the dash in place of the 10cms. Will be better than having the tweeters down by your legs.

campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Wednesday 17th September
quotequote all
gmaz said:
Consider an underseat sub if it will fit. Your twingo's boot is probably small enough without a sub enclosure in there!

https://caraudiocentre.co.uk/products/in-phase-usw...
You're right, boot is pretty tiny, under the seat would be ideal as I very rarely carry passengers in the back.

defblade

7,877 posts

231 months

Thursday 18th September
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If you're going underseat... passive subs are quite expensive! Even my little 10" RF shallow sub is over £200 these days!

Taking a rough stab at your budget from the examples you posted, I'd probably go for an active underseat like https://caraudiodirect.co.uk/products/pioneer-ts-w...

Then you can have a 2-channel in the back with matched comps up front, such as
https://caraudiodirect.co.uk/products/hertz-dieci-...
playing on
https://caraudiodirect.co.uk/products/hertz-dieci-...

This gives a nice balanced 80w per channel, and the speakers have pretty good sensitivity - 93dB - which is effectively a measure of how loud they will sound to your ear at a given power. (dB is a logarithmic scale; an increase of 3dB is twice the power, but IIRC, you need approx 4 times the power before you perceive that the volume sounds twice as loud. Anyhow, going from 90-91dB speakers to 93dB ones will make a significant improvement in how loud it sounds).


There is a small chance that, depending what you're looking for from the whole thing, just a set of decent 16.5cm speakers with good sensitivity (ditch the little dash ones) well mounted could give you what you are looking for from the factory HU, without the bother of the rest.
A set of https://caraudiodirect.co.uk/products/focal-access... made big improvements to my factory HU as I installed them a few weeks before I got on with the rest of my latest install.
(Then a set of https://caraudiodirect.co.uk/products/audison-apk1... with 93.5dB made even more a year or two later... and now I've still got my eyes out for a new (to me) Genesis amp with 100w plus per channel to power them properly!)

This is where I go into my usual chat about clipping, which kills nice speakers very quickly. If you raise the volume of most HUs (and the gain on amps) too far, the nice sound wave form gets clipped at either end and becomes flat at the limit of the amp's (Hu internal, or external) power. Run a 1kHz test tone through your system (possibly wearing ear defenders - it's piercing) and you'll hear it take on a metallic buzz/edge as you hit the point the amp starts to clip - don't turn it up past there if you're running from the HU; you'll need to tweak each stage (HU pre-out and amp gains) if you're using an external amp. This is a quick and dirty method, but it requires no special kit and works well enough.

Edited by defblade on Thursday 18th September 22:06

campionissimo

Original Poster:

597 posts

142 months

Sunday 21st September
quotequote all
This has all been super helpful, thank you.

Components, amp and an underseat sub it is.......there will be questions about how to wire it all up!!