Re: Stereo installation
Rick,<br />A few more things to look at.<br /><br />Disconnect your speaker wiring at each speaker and from the radio's wiring harness. Put your test meter on DC voltage and with the RED meter lead on battery positive, test each speaker wire pair at the radio for voltage, there should be no reading. If you DO see voltage, this would indicate that one or more speaker wires are grounded, and that's bad. Clear the grounds and continue.<br /><br />Next, swap your meter leads. Place the Black meter lead on battery Negative. Again meter each speaker lead (using the Red meter lead) at the radio end, looking for voltage. If you DO see voltage, this indicates that one or more speaker leads are connected to battery positive, again this is bad, find short to battery and clear.You should read no voltage on any speaker lead in this test.<br /> <br />Next, switch your meter to read Ohms (resistance). With the speaker wires still disconnected at the speakers and radio, meter each speakers 'pairs' at the radio, you should not see any continunity(they should show 'open circuit' between the speaker pairs. If you DO see a reading, this means that the speaker pair is 'shorted', find and clear (open the short circuit) before proceding.<br /><br />Last step.<br />Place meter in Ohms (resistance) test mode.<br />At the speaker end, connect both speaker wires.<br />At the radio end, meter each speaker pair. You should see a resistance reading. The meter will show the total resistance for each pair of wires. The lower the reading the better. A high resistance reading would indicate a bad connection or perhaps corrosion within the wire itself. Replace as needed. All pairs should show only a few Ohms of resistance. Longer wiring runs will show a bit more resistance, shorter runs less resistance.<br /><br />The above tests will verify that your speaker wires are:<br />1. Each speaker pair is not shorted.<br />2. Each speaker wire is not connected to ground<br />3. Each speaker wire in not connected to the battery.<br />4. Each speaker wire is not broken or have high resistance due to corrosion.<br /><br />Lastly, test the speakers themselves.<br />Meter on Ohms.<br />Place Black meter lead on metal housing of speaker. Place Red meter on speaker terminals, first one then the other. You should not have any reading. If you DO see a resistance reading, this means the speaker windings are internally shorted/connected to the speaker case. If the speaker case is connected to a metal ground, there's your short circuit. The radio's amp will see this as a short to ground on that channel, and that's bad.<br />Meter the speaker terminals, Black meter lead to one, Red meter lead to the other. You should read the resistance of the speaker coil. A high reading means high internal speaker coil resistance, a zero reading means possibly a shorted speaker coil.