How To
Adjust Your Amplifier Gain Control
The
function of gain controls is one of the easiest to learn
yet is almost universally misunderstood. Improper
understanding of them leads to more product failure and
more listenener dissatisfaction than will ever be
appreciated.
Gain
controls ARE NOT tools to increase volume or SPL.
Setting
the gain controls properly is very easy, and is best
accomplished using 2 people. The owner of the car, sitting in
the drivers seat (or obviously a competant installer) and a
person adjusting the controls according to instruction from the
listener.
In a
simple set up, with a 2 channel amp and no other amplification
(including the source unit itself) do the following:
Turn the gain all
the way down.
Now, turn the
source volume control to somewhere between 2/3's and
3/4's (in other words, MOST of the way, but not all the
way up)
Slowly increase
the gain control, finding the maximum setting allowable
w/o the presence of perceptable distortion.
If
you have a left/right gain, you MAY want to tweak the
left just a pinch lower to increase your PERCEPTION
that the left in right are of equal volume (although
their actual output should be equal with both gains set
identically)
Thats it.
Now leave it alone. You'll get true and maximum attenuation
from your source unit's volume control.
A gain
control DOES NOT increase the output of an amplifier, per se -
It helps select the position on your source volume control
where your amp output will be maximized.
If you
change your speakers, repeat the process, otherwise, don't let
your idiot, know-it-all friends touch it.
A multiple
amp setup is almost as simple. There the gain controls are
again employed to give you maximum swing from your source
controls including volume, balance, fade, and possibly sub bass
volume.
So, start
with the amp that will be responsible for your staging, or
imaging and adjust according to the previous instruction. Set
your volume to your normal listening level (unless normal for
you is 150db, in which case you might want to tune your system
at a somewhat moderate level). Then, put your balance, fade and
bass controls into neutral setting. Now, slowly increase the
gains of those amplifiers, bringing them just to the level
where you feel they are in perfect balance with the rest of the
system. Rotate them above and below that threshold a few times
until you are satisfied that they are in balance. Now leave
them alone. Make all future adjustments from your source
controls.
IN A
NUTSHELL:
Gain
controls ARE NOT for the purpose of increasing volume. They are
for the purpose of giving you maximum use of your source
controls while making it easy for you to default your system to
'normal' by putting your controls in a neutral
position.
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