Pegasus said:Whelp, after realizing I had neither the time nor the expertise to do the job correctly, I bought some industrial-grade hook-and-loop fastener and took my little powered sub and Spark EV to Lombard's Stereo in Santa Maria and this is the result:
I figured since nobody can sit in the middle position anyway, that's a good place for the sub. No reduction in leg or foot room, practically invisible wires, and no holes drilled toward the traction battery! Those of you looking to mount an amp may want to consider this position as well.
I'm pretty happy with the result since I can now hear the bottom half of my tunes. One thing to be aware of is that the head unit doesn't have a discrete "power on" signal: it uses the GMLAN bus for that. So if your amp does, you'll either need to tie it to the ignition signal, or use a low-voltage trigger which lets it stay on any time the speakers are energized. I opted for the latter so I can still have bass without having the car on.
JohnnyEv said:For those interested ,I made some 3D printable 4x6 adapters to put 5x7 speakers in the rear deck. (BTW, they are screw with no mods required so even if you lease you can undo this addition and put back to stock at the end of your lease.)
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2938980
To adapt your rear speakers from the 4x6 small ones and put a larger 5x7 in their place. Mirror for opposite side. Designed for Phoenix Gold SX57CX speakers (Great Speakers, worth the $$) . May want to reduce flange cut depth from 3mm to 1.5mm, Size is 200mm x 146mm x 31.75mm. Will fit on 165mm X 145mm bed if you use the split in half version and use 4x 1/8 diameter pins and epoxy parts together. Original solid works file included for customization. (see thingiverse link for files)
Also, the hardest part of running wires to the front of the car is removing the side rear airbag to run wires for the amp / remote / front speakers etc. Look them up on ebay (for pictures) and you can see where the loop is that "pops" in place. It takes ALOT of force to pop it up, but once you have it out of the way running the wires is pretty easy.
Johnny
TheLondonBroiler said:Factory radios will do 4-8 ohms, no problem. Infinity makes some 2 ohm speakers (that read 3 on a meter), and they're usually no problem either. It wasn't uncommon in the past for GM to use 10 ohm speakers.
I don't think you'll have any problem at all, unless you decide to take the radio out to see if the amplifier is hot. Taking the radio out is a PITA.
Just remembered, I'm running non factory, 4 ohm, front speakers, and have been for 4 months. Zero issues, but then again, I'm mostly listening to podcasts..... at less than halfway (under 20).
Sounds like a great way to get 'LOW', but how does it sound without a direct path for the speaker to shake the air in the cabin?SparkieV said:.... installed a small 8 inch powered subwoofer in a cast aluminum enclosure from Rockville Audio. .... Modified the foam in the trunk with my Dremel to house the setup without using any cargo space and staying hidden. Did the whole thing for about $130 including shipping and sounds pretty good!
They are free air mounted. Let's be honest, these are tweeters with 4 inches of rubber for aesthetics. Adding a baffle makes a unnatural sound in my opinion, as did the original stock speaker enclosure.Did you use the stock speaker enclosures or are they just 'Free Air' mounted?
I would say yes a bit, maybe, nothing drastic.Are they louder due to the 4 ohm?
Doubtful. Everyone else on here seems to be fine running them.Could this harm the head unit at high power levels?
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