Okay.....Got into the right/rear. This was a PAIN in the ass really. I WON'T be putting the panel back until I decide what I'm gonna do back there.
If you wanna tackle this, just be careful, and DO get a pack of these panel fasteners I have pictured. I broke three of them even being careful. The ones pictured were a few bucks from Autozone.....had four inside the pack, which is exactly how many are in the center cover. Center cover hides two screws you need to remove for the rear inside right trim. There are also two or three of those "screw inside a fastener" things. You sorta have to get a blade or fingernail under the center while loosening those. The other tricky part is lifting the rear of the back seat to get at the 14mm seatbelt bolt that HAS to come out. When you pull the sill cover (just pulls off), be careful of the bright silver clips that tend to fall out...just snap them back into the sill piece.
The Amp and sub are quite easy to deal with. Be careful to LIFT the sub or you WILL break one or both of the plastic tabs on the back (I broke one of them). They aren't important, but they do help to locate the sub while you fumble for the four 10mm bolts.
The Amp:
Some things I noticed. Unplugging the amp COMPLETELY has absolutely NO effect on the LED rings.....so any concern I had about screwing with the amp and having the LED rings not work....forget it. LED rings are apparently either run SOLELY from the head unit, or not related to the headunit at all.
Unplugging ONLY the smaller connector, apparently does not kill the two front side channels. The remaining channels die when you pull the larger connector (and the LED rings live on!!)
The amp has a BUNCH of wires on the large connector. I did not have time today to play with what did what. The only wires I know for SURE....are the four wires closest the center of the vehicle. Those are the sub.
The sub is a DUAL voicecoil sub.....and it says those are 2 ohm load (I measured about 3 ohms)...so if you replaced the AMP and kept the original sub (I wouldn't)...you would use both the left and right channel.
There is LOTS of depth for the sub....I'm gonna guess at least 5" without measuring. The sub itself is ALOT bigger around than it's cone, so putting an 8" or even a 10" if you were crafty and don't mind using a nibbler. LOTS of clear sheet metal around the stock provision you can cut away. The "grill" for the sub is just held in with a few phillips screws behind it......You could likely TOSS the stock grill and use a bigger one outside the panel.
I took the amp all apart.....It is an impressive little thing, but there really isn't anything for you to mess with inside (I was looking for gain or x-over pots inside). You can look at my pics if you're curious, but there's no point really in going into the amp. I'm not really sure how these guys can say "300 watts" when the amp just has two output chips and a couple little other pieces of "big silicon". I'm used to seeing those numbers when seeing chinese audio gear though. It's a little marvel of VLSI chips and REALLY small surface mount stuff. Not what I'm really used to seeing in amps of "my day".
So far, I haven't really done anything yet. Just put the seatbelt bolt and sill cover back, and left sub/amp open for all to see for now. Looks like I can get away with putting the big foam box back and the floor cover.....and just drive it around for awhile. I have to do some measuring, see if I want to deal with replacing the little amp altogether, Just maybe adding a sub amp, what would JUST a sub upgrade sound like on THIS amp, etc.
If you wanna tackle this, just be careful, and DO get a pack of these panel fasteners I have pictured. I broke three of them even being careful. The ones pictured were a few bucks from Autozone.....had four inside the pack, which is exactly how many are in the center cover. Center cover hides two screws you need to remove for the rear inside right trim. There are also two or three of those "screw inside a fastener" things. You sorta have to get a blade or fingernail under the center while loosening those. The other tricky part is lifting the rear of the back seat to get at the 14mm seatbelt bolt that HAS to come out. When you pull the sill cover (just pulls off), be careful of the bright silver clips that tend to fall out...just snap them back into the sill piece.
The Amp and sub are quite easy to deal with. Be careful to LIFT the sub or you WILL break one or both of the plastic tabs on the back (I broke one of them). They aren't important, but they do help to locate the sub while you fumble for the four 10mm bolts.
The Amp:
Some things I noticed. Unplugging the amp COMPLETELY has absolutely NO effect on the LED rings.....so any concern I had about screwing with the amp and having the LED rings not work....forget it. LED rings are apparently either run SOLELY from the head unit, or not related to the headunit at all.
Unplugging ONLY the smaller connector, apparently does not kill the two front side channels. The remaining channels die when you pull the larger connector (and the LED rings live on!!)
The amp has a BUNCH of wires on the large connector. I did not have time today to play with what did what. The only wires I know for SURE....are the four wires closest the center of the vehicle. Those are the sub.
The sub is a DUAL voicecoil sub.....and it says those are 2 ohm load (I measured about 3 ohms)...so if you replaced the AMP and kept the original sub (I wouldn't)...you would use both the left and right channel.
There is LOTS of depth for the sub....I'm gonna guess at least 5" without measuring. The sub itself is ALOT bigger around than it's cone, so putting an 8" or even a 10" if you were crafty and don't mind using a nibbler. LOTS of clear sheet metal around the stock provision you can cut away. The "grill" for the sub is just held in with a few phillips screws behind it......You could likely TOSS the stock grill and use a bigger one outside the panel.
I took the amp all apart.....It is an impressive little thing, but there really isn't anything for you to mess with inside (I was looking for gain or x-over pots inside). You can look at my pics if you're curious, but there's no point really in going into the amp. I'm not really sure how these guys can say "300 watts" when the amp just has two output chips and a couple little other pieces of "big silicon". I'm used to seeing those numbers when seeing chinese audio gear though. It's a little marvel of VLSI chips and REALLY small surface mount stuff. Not what I'm really used to seeing in amps of "my day".
So far, I haven't really done anything yet. Just put the seatbelt bolt and sill cover back, and left sub/amp open for all to see for now. Looks like I can get away with putting the big foam box back and the floor cover.....and just drive it around for awhile. I have to do some measuring, see if I want to deal with replacing the little amp altogether, Just maybe adding a sub amp, what would JUST a sub upgrade sound like on THIS amp, etc.