Help me find a 12v source for my amp
#1
Cpt. Slow
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Help me find a 12v source for my amp
I'm using this little guy from ebay:
to power my old speakers. It needs DC-12V .5A, see?
Currently using this wall wart to power it:
As you can see, that's supposedly 3 volts and 400mA higher than what the amp needs, but it works perfectly. I can get the system way louder than I need it and quality is exactly what I want.
Problem is any 12 volt source I find in the car is of a much higher amperage, and distorts the sound at any volume higher than what my iphone can do on it's own. Found one that was barely better, and it caused the check engine light to pulse with the music, which can't be good.
Any idea where I can get a decent 12v .5-1a source? I'm sure the stock stereo wiring would work, but that's long been cut out. There's still lots of stuff under the dash, just don't know where to tap it from.
to power my old speakers. It needs DC-12V .5A, see?
Currently using this wall wart to power it:
As you can see, that's supposedly 3 volts and 400mA higher than what the amp needs, but it works perfectly. I can get the system way louder than I need it and quality is exactly what I want.
Problem is any 12 volt source I find in the car is of a much higher amperage, and distorts the sound at any volume higher than what my iphone can do on it's own. Found one that was barely better, and it caused the check engine light to pulse with the music, which can't be good.
Any idea where I can get a decent 12v .5-1a source? I'm sure the stock stereo wiring would work, but that's long been cut out. There's still lots of stuff under the dash, just don't know where to tap it from.
#2
Amperage is current draw, it isn't forced. In other words, providing a source of higher current capability doesn't mean the device drawing from it will be overpowered, it will only draw what it needs to operate, so that isn't your problem.
My guess is voltage fluctuation caused by your alternator when plugging it directly into your car's electrical system is what is causing the distortion. i.e. -> your amps internal reg and power supply filtering are ----.
I can power my detcans from a wall adapter or from batteries and get crystal clear sound all day long, but plugging them into the cig lighter port on a car makes them pretty much unusable.
What you probably need is a good sized cap on the power feed line to suppress the noise. You can pick them up on ebay for pretty cheap, like <$10 bucks.
My guess is voltage fluctuation caused by your alternator when plugging it directly into your car's electrical system is what is causing the distortion. i.e. -> your amps internal reg and power supply filtering are ----.
I can power my detcans from a wall adapter or from batteries and get crystal clear sound all day long, but plugging them into the cig lighter port on a car makes them pretty much unusable.
What you probably need is a good sized cap on the power feed line to suppress the noise. You can pick them up on ebay for pretty cheap, like <$10 bucks.
#4
Cpt. Slow
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That's not what I wanted to hear!
Can you link me to something like what you were talking about? Maybe I have something around here that would work.
I know when I wired in a cigarette lighter to some random 12v15a power source off the fuse box it would work for my DC-AC power inverter, but blow up my phone chargers.
Can you link me to something like what you were talking about? Maybe I have something around here that would work.
I know when I wired in a cigarette lighter to some random 12v15a power source off the fuse box it would work for my DC-AC power inverter, but blow up my phone chargers.
#5
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The amperage rating on the device (0.5a) tells you that, when operating at 12v, the device will consume a maximum of 0.5 amps (continuous) when operated at its highest level. Because of this, you must feed it from a circuit which is capable of supplying no less than 0.5 amps. You can connect it to a circuit rated to deliver 1 amp or 100 amps, and the device will perform the same.
Think of an air compressor. Voltage is air pressure (PSI), and current is air volume (CFM).
Now, say that you have a small grinder that wants 40 PSI at 10 CFM. We all know that you need to stick a regulator in there to reduce the pressure of the air from whatever is in the tank down to 40 PSI or you'll probably damage the tool. But does it matter if you have it plugged into a compressor which is capable of delivering 50 CFM vs one rated only for 20 CFM? Of course not. So long as you don't over-pressurize the tool, it's only going to consume 10 CFM, regardless of what the compressor is capable of supplying it.
Same concept in electronics. At a given voltage, any device is only going to consume as much current as it wants to, and no more. You could connect that amp directly to the battery (which is capable of supplying at least 1,000 amps) and it would work just fine.
Sidebar: Ohms Law tells us that Power (in watts) is equal to Voltage (in volts) x Current (in amps). So an amplifier which draws 0.5 amps at 12 volts will be capable of delivering an average power of 6 watts. (Figure normal system voltage at 13.8v instead of 12v and you can get all the way up to 6.9 watts.)
edit: I see that in the time it took me to write this, several others have chimed in with similar opinions. Curse my obsession with verbosity.
#6
Cpt. Slow
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Don't worry, I understood from Jeff that I was doing it wrong, you clearly spelled out why.
So Joe, or anyone, does the fluctuating voltage from my alternator sound like the issue?
My revised question: does anyone know of a steady 12 volt, anyf'ing amp circuit I can draw from?
So Joe, or anyone, does the fluctuating voltage from my alternator sound like the issue?
My revised question: does anyone know of a steady 12 volt, anyf'ing amp circuit I can draw from?
#12
Cpt. Slow
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http://www.ebay.com/itm/120426423251...84.m1497.l2649
If you're interested, it really does work great with a wall wart, can't wait to have some tunes for my next drive to ORP, or if I decide to drive it to work.
If you're interested, it really does work great with a wall wart, can't wait to have some tunes for my next drive to ORP, or if I decide to drive it to work.
#14
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My revised question: does anyone know of a steady 12 volt, anyf'ing amp circuit I can draw from?
If noise is indeed the issue, it's possible to filter the power with various combinations of L and C, however it's easy to start spending money this way.
Hmm. Which one wire in a standard ECU harness contains switched +12?
(Hint: it's the white/red wire on every Miata until '01.)
#15
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Oh and what's a wall wart?
#16
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Isn't that an "in" power? I was thinking about finding a 12v coming form the MS to hopefully be a little cleaner. I'll try the white/red when I get a chance.
I was hoping to avoid plugging the wall wart into the inverter into the cig lighter into the car, but it might come to that.
Jbrown, a "wall wart" is what I call a 120v AC to somerandomvolt DC adapter. Comes with most electronics these days.
I thought it was a fairly common term?
I was hoping to avoid plugging the wall wart into the inverter into the cig lighter into the car, but it might come to that.
Jbrown, a "wall wart" is what I call a 120v AC to somerandomvolt DC adapter. Comes with most electronics these days.
I thought it was a fairly common term?
#17
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And like Joe said, yup. It really is **** with the wall wart. If I can find some clean power it'll be a gold mine. Might wanna wait for a bit though, if I can't get it to work, I might blow $30 on one with a slightly better internal power regulation rather than more money on capacitors.
#19
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Isn't what an "in" power? I don't understand what's being asked here.
There's really no power filtration anywhere in the entire car (unless you count the one capacitor near the ignition system), so the "cleanliness" of the power will be roughly the same anywhere.
Here's a quick thought experiment: Consider the factory radio. It's not plugged into anything special, power-wise, and yet it sounds fine. It also draws more than 0.5A, which should give you some clue as to the quality / power-delivery of that amplifier you've got there. From the pictures in the first post, it seems to say something like "500W" on the side, and that's just an absolute fantasy by nearly two orders of magnitude.
I was thinking about finding a 12v coming form the MS to hopefully be a little cleaner.
Here's a quick thought experiment: Consider the factory radio. It's not plugged into anything special, power-wise, and yet it sounds fine. It also draws more than 0.5A, which should give you some clue as to the quality / power-delivery of that amplifier you've got there. From the pictures in the first post, it seems to say something like "500W" on the side, and that's just an absolute fantasy by nearly two orders of magnitude.
#20
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I realize the crapiness of the amp, and care not what the actual watt output is, only that it cost just under $13 shipped. I drive this thing twice a month max outside of track days, I wanted a sub $20 system to power the speakers I already had and to have it run off my iphone.
You pretty much got what I meant about the "in" power. It's going into the MS, which means it hasn't been capacitorized (is that a word?) yet. But you also said the MS doesn't really do that, so scratch that idea.
I will try white/red wire, see if it's any better than anything else I've tried. If not, which I'm expecting it won't, I'll try some sort of capacitor. I wonder if I have an old camera laying around I could yank the flash out of. Dumb idea?
I really feel bad for myself, I'm not as electrically stupid as I make myself sound in this thread. Oh well, I'm certainly not doing anything to prove otherwise.
You pretty much got what I meant about the "in" power. It's going into the MS, which means it hasn't been capacitorized (is that a word?) yet. But you also said the MS doesn't really do that, so scratch that idea.
I will try white/red wire, see if it's any better than anything else I've tried. If not, which I'm expecting it won't, I'll try some sort of capacitor. I wonder if I have an old camera laying around I could yank the flash out of. Dumb idea?
I really feel bad for myself, I'm not as electrically stupid as I make myself sound in this thread. Oh well, I'm certainly not doing anything to prove otherwise.