|
|
| Search | Car Forums | Gallery | Articles | Helper | Air Dried Fresh Beef Dog Food | IgorSushko.com | Corporate |
|
|||||||
| Car Audio Do you live in your car? Then you need to be able to listen to some high-quality music. |
![]() |
Show Printable Version |
Subscribe to this Thread
|
|
|
Thread Tools |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Why is this any ideas? ANYBODY??
I own a 2000 honda Civic Ex sedan.
My problem is every so often depending on the song I play this happens. I will play the song with bass and treble at the halfway point but it happen's most often when I play the them past the halfway point. THe song will be playing then it like CUTS out, then I hear the song like at whisper level....? Whats the deal? it did it when I had the honda stock speakers. I went to my dealer and they just sed that its normal that If I play the bass at higher levels that something overheats and thats why it cuts out. Does anybody know why this is? To solve this problem I just turn off the player wait a few minutes like 1-2 minutes, and turn it back on then everything is back to normal. Like I said this doesn't happen often just randomly and it seems connected to harder hitting songs with bass in it.. can anyone tell me what the deal is? p.s. everything is STOCK, except for now I have 2 6.5" infinity kappas in front and 2 6 x 9 sony explodes in the back, nothing high end at all everything else is stock including the cd player, but as I sed even when I had the stock speakers it would do this, though I does it less now with my aftermarket spears thanks for all
__________________
Sean Price keepin it real/packin steeL/gettin high/cuz life's a b*tch and then u die.... |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
First of all, you can turn the bass/volume up too high on a song with serious base and overload the stock speakers. However, in my 99 EX, I usually had the volume at max because the stock stereo sucked so bad, and I'd just compensate by turning the bass down a little if a song was causing the speakers to "bottom out". I'm sure you've experienced that: it's when the speaker basically cuts off because it can't handle the signal it's receiving, usually too much bass. However, it should only last as long as it's getting that signal. For instance, if your speakers were cutting out during a song and you turned the bass down, they should immediately respond and stop cutting out. You shouldn't have to turn the stereo off to keep them from doing that.
Now, if the problem you're describing is actually what you say it is, where the only way to get the sound back to normal is to turn the stereo off and wait a minute or two, that is not normal, no matter what the dealer says. The stock head unit, while it is a piece of junk, is still not supposed to overheat, regardless of the song you're playing through it. Now, if you were driving around with your windows up through death valley with the volume maxed out in 140 degree sun then maybe, just maybe I could see the argument for the circuitry overheating, but under normal conditions, it should never happen. That said, Honda should issue a replacement head unit to you, assuming you're still under warranty. I don't know if adding your aftermarket speakers voided the warranty (in many cases a simple thing like that will), but you could try anyway. If the dealer gets testy, I would tell them you're going to complain to Honda about how they tried to tell you the problem was normal. Good Luck :argue: C
__________________
96 Honda Civic Daily - H22 Swap 82 Renault R5 Weekend Runner - Nearly Stock 83 Renault R5 Track Car - 13:1 CR, Archer Cams |
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
POST REPLY TO THIS THREAD |
![]() |
|
|