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Sidney
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I'm in the process of adding a subwoofer to my car. In doing so I spliced in a T harness to audio wires from the head unit and routed the wiring to where I Will planningbe placing the Amp. I tested the speakers after that using the balance/fade settings from the head unit; all channels work as expected.

In the interest of future proofing my wiring I tapped all forfour speaker channels, that way if I decide to add a four channel amp I don't have to rerun another wire set. Unfortunately with four speaker wire sets, I didn't keep track of which is which, and need to verify which wire-pair belongs to which speaker channel.

I was wondering if I could use the balance/fade settings on my head unit and a multimeter to determine which speaker wire is which channel. I can set it up so only one speaker is active at a time and test the wire pairs with my multimeter, but I'm not sure if I should be looking at voltage, amperage, or both.

I'm in the process of adding a subwoofer to my car. In doing so I spliced in a T harness to audio wires from the head unit and routed the wiring to where I Will planning the Amp. I tested the speakers after that using the balance/fade settings from the head unit; all channels work as expected.

In the interest of future proofing my wiring I tapped all for speaker channels, that way if I decide to add a four channel amp I don't have to rerun another wire set. Unfortunately with four speaker wire sets, I didn't keep track of which is which, and need to verify which wire-pair belongs to which speaker channel.

I was wondering if I could use the balance/fade settings on my head unit and a multimeter to determine which speaker wire is which channel. I can set it up so only one speaker is active at a time and test the wire pairs with my multimeter, but I'm not sure if I should be looking at voltage, amperage, or both.

I'm in the process of adding a subwoofer to my car. In doing so I spliced in a T harness to audio wires from the head unit and routed the wiring to where I Will be placing the Amp. I tested the speakers after that using the balance/fade settings from the head unit; all channels work as expected.

In the interest of future proofing my wiring I tapped all four speaker channels, that way if I decide to add a four channel amp I don't have to rerun another wire set. Unfortunately with four speaker wire sets, I didn't keep track of which is which, and need to verify which wire-pair belongs to which speaker channel.

I was wondering if I could use the balance/fade settings on my head unit and a multimeter to determine which speaker wire is which channel. I can set it up so only one speaker is active at a time and test the wire pairs with my multimeter, but I'm not sure if I should be looking at voltage, amperage, or both.

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Sidney
  • 217
  • 3
  • 8

Can I use a multimeter to measure audio signals by testing amperage or voltage?

I'm in the process of adding a subwoofer to my car. In doing so I spliced in a T harness to audio wires from the head unit and routed the wiring to where I Will planning the Amp. I tested the speakers after that using the balance/fade settings from the head unit; all channels work as expected.

In the interest of future proofing my wiring I tapped all for speaker channels, that way if I decide to add a four channel amp I don't have to rerun another wire set. Unfortunately with four speaker wire sets, I didn't keep track of which is which, and need to verify which wire-pair belongs to which speaker channel.

I was wondering if I could use the balance/fade settings on my head unit and a multimeter to determine which speaker wire is which channel. I can set it up so only one speaker is active at a time and test the wire pairs with my multimeter, but I'm not sure if I should be looking at voltage, amperage, or both.