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Car Audio Discussion
General Car Audio
2010 Chevy Suburban
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<blockquote data-quote="2023 LTZ" data-source="post: 8831926" data-attributes="member: 686684"><p>Hola</p><p>I’d look to replace the speakers from front to back. Those are cavernous vehicles, irregardless depending on how many speakers you replace, look into a multi channel amp to power the speakers. Essentially 1 channel per speaker. If you choose to get subwoofers you’ll want a different amp for that.</p><p>I’ve found </p><p>Crutchfield.com</p><p>To be very helpful in selecting upgrade stuff. Rockford is good stuff. They’re a leader in the industry. Many other companies produce quality stuff as well. It’s like ford v Chevy but w more options, products and decisions. It’s assembling a working system piece by piece.</p><p></p><p>Sometimes I wish I had kept my original head unit and most of the time I like the features of its replacement. The original hu will power almost any speakers but the sound wouldn’t be much better than what’s in there. You’ll likely want an amplifier.</p><p>Crutchfield has a tool which enables you to put your vehicle characteristics in and it knows what size all the replacements are. Customization is extraordinarily expensive should you choose that route. Otherwise just replace using the same size stuff. They know what will fit.</p><p>Higher watts doesn’t necessarily mean better sound quality. It translates to loudness. Quality comes from things like an equalizer, digital sound processing 3-4v outputs on a head unit if you go that route which is the beginning of a perceived ability to reproduce the full frequency of the original recording and attempt to make it as close as you believe it can be. Quality gear takes fewer steps. Opinions vary far and wide.</p><p>Check out that website and see what you feel like starting your journey with.</p><p>I’ve been tweaking, replacing, upgrading for several years now and have found I absolutely love the rolling concert stage.</p><p>Enjoy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="2023 LTZ, post: 8831926, member: 686684"] Hola I’d look to replace the speakers from front to back. Those are cavernous vehicles, irregardless depending on how many speakers you replace, look into a multi channel amp to power the speakers. Essentially 1 channel per speaker. If you choose to get subwoofers you’ll want a different amp for that. I’ve found Crutchfield.com To be very helpful in selecting upgrade stuff. Rockford is good stuff. They’re a leader in the industry. Many other companies produce quality stuff as well. It’s like ford v Chevy but w more options, products and decisions. It’s assembling a working system piece by piece. Sometimes I wish I had kept my original head unit and most of the time I like the features of its replacement. The original hu will power almost any speakers but the sound wouldn’t be much better than what’s in there. You’ll likely want an amplifier. Crutchfield has a tool which enables you to put your vehicle characteristics in and it knows what size all the replacements are. Customization is extraordinarily expensive should you choose that route. Otherwise just replace using the same size stuff. They know what will fit. Higher watts doesn’t necessarily mean better sound quality. It translates to loudness. Quality comes from things like an equalizer, digital sound processing 3-4v outputs on a head unit if you go that route which is the beginning of a perceived ability to reproduce the full frequency of the original recording and attempt to make it as close as you believe it can be. Quality gear takes fewer steps. Opinions vary far and wide. Check out that website and see what you feel like starting your journey with. I’ve been tweaking, replacing, upgrading for several years now and have found I absolutely love the rolling concert stage. Enjoy [/QUOTE]
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