Adjusting The Gain - Thunder 4405 Manual De Instrucciones

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AMPLIFIERS

Adjusting the Gain

1. Turn the gain controls on the amplifier all the way down.
2. Turn up the volume control on the source unit to approx-
imately 3/4 of maximum.
3. Adjust the front channel gain control on the amplifier
until audible distortion occurs.
4. Adjust the front channel gain control down until audible
distortion disappears.
5. Follow steps 3-4 for rear channel and sub-channel gain
settings.
6. The amplifier is now calibrated to the source unit's out-
put. The rear and sub channels may be adjusted accord-
ing to your personal taste.
Definitions of Common Terms
The following list of terms with their definitions is offered
as help in understanding the set-up and operation of
your amplifier.
1. Crossover (xover) - an electrical filter with high-pass
or low-pass characteristics that divides the frequency
range into playable bands for certain speakers.
Subwoofers, mid-bass, midrange and tweeters are all
designed to play different frequencies and should do so
to avoid damage. The xover point is where the playable
frequencies cross from one speaker to the next at -3dB
below reference level.
2. Full-range - refers to signals which cover the entire
audio frequency span from 20Hz to 20kHz.
3. High-pass - simply put, this blocks lower frequencies
which damage smaller speakers, and passes the higher
frequencies for smaller speakers like the midrange and
tweeter.
4. Low-pass - you got it, this is the inverse of a
high-pass. It blocks higher frequencies and passes
the playable lower frequencies to the larger speak-
ers, like subwoofers.
Typical Speaker
Wiring
Configurations
5-Channel Amplifier
Mono Amp and Bridged Stereo Amp
Impedance Requirements
— 2 ohm minimum for sub (mono) channel
— 4 ohm bridge minimum for stereo channels
— 2 ohm stereo minimum for stereo channels
Note: The information shown for
bridged stereo channels is good
for both the front and rear channels
8 ohm
4 ohm
8 ohm
4 ohm
4 ohm
4 ohm
8 ohm
8 ohm
4 ohm
4 ohm
4 ohm
4 ohm
8 ohm
8 ohm
+ + -
- +
+ + - - +
- L L R R
- L L R R
s
s
u
+ + -
- +
b
u
b
- L L R R
Three or more 4 ohm speakers
s
for sub channel
Two 4 ohm speakers for
u
Two 4 ohm speakers for bridged
sub channel
b
stereo channel
One 4 ohm speaker for
Four 8 ohm speakers for
bridged stereo channel
NOT
sub channel
OK
Two 8 ohm speakers for
bridged stereo channel
OK
OK
5. Impedance - the resistance to the flow of current in an
alternating current circuit (such as with music). Line
level circuits are typically a high impedance of several
thousand ohms, while speaker level circuits are usually
a low impedance of a few ohms.
6. Line level - the type of signal produced at the outputs
of tape decks, CD tuners, preamplifiers, etc., with a
typical value of a volt or less in a high impedance circuit.
7. Speaker level - the type of output that is meant to
drive speakers. These signals are sometimes called
high level and are usually connected by two conductor
speaker wires.
8. Signal - the signal of an audio system is what is heard
from the speakers. These signals may be high pass, low
pass or full-range.
We don't have enough space for Electronics 101, so if
you have a good, bad or amusing question, please call us
TOLL FREE at 800-CALL MTX! (800-225-5689)
Troubleshooting
Read this if you wanna be a do-it-yourselfer
Problem
Cause
No LED indication
No +12V at remote connection
No +12V at Power connection
Insufficient ground connection
Blown power fuse
LED on, no output
Volume on head unit off
Speaker connections not made
Signal processing units off
All speakers blown
Output distorted
Head unit volume set too high
Amplifier gain set too high
Balance reversed
Speakers wired L + R reversed
RCA inputs reversed
Some balance reversed
Some Speakers wired L + R
reversed
Some RCA inputs reversed
Bass is boomy
Thunder EQ too high
Bass is weak
Thunder EQ too low
Speakers wired out
of phase
Not using MTX woofers
Blowing fuses
Excessive output levels
Amplifier defective
or give us a call at 800-CALL MTX.
Solution
Supply +12V to terminal
Supply +12V to terminal
Verify ground connection
Replace fuse
Increase volume on head unit
Make speaker connections
Apply power to signal processor
Replace speakers
Lower head unit volume
Lower amplifier gain
Wire speakers with correct orientation
Reverse RCA inputs
Wire speakers with correct orientation
Reverse appropriate RCA inputs
Lower setting
Raise setting
Wire with correct phase
Buy MTX woofers
Lower volume
Return for service

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