Speaker Upgrade

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Guest, Jul 5, 2005.

  1. Guest

    Guest Guest

    Not sure if this is the right forum, but I'd like to upgrade the stock
    speakers in my 2003 Civic to higher wattage, better quality speakers.

    Will I hear an improvement in sound quality/volume making this switch by
    itself, or will it be necessary to upgrade the amplifier as well? I plan to
    do both at some point, but I can only afford to do it in stages.

    Also, I plan to use the speaker wires from the stock stereo to act as high
    input signals to the amplifier later on. It's obviously the easiest way to
    upgrade, but are there any drawbacks to doing it this way?

    Thanks
    Glenn
     
    Guest, Jul 5, 2005
    #1
  2. Guest

    Ron Jeremy Guest

    I replaced the factory speakers in a 2000 Honda Accord EX Coupe, and the
    sound was only a "slight" improvement with the addition of an amplifier
    hooked up to the factory radio powering these factory replacements.
    Don't get me wrong, it was much louder than the factory setup, but I
    didn't care for the speaker level inputs on my amp. Just think of it
    like this, any distortion from the head unit, gets amplified, and passed
    through your lovely speakers.
    Speaker line inputs are, at best, "nasty" when it comes to sound quality
    versus running RCA cables from the head unit pre-amp outputs to your
    power amp(s). In my 2000 Accord, I really didn't notice in improvement
    in sound quality until I replaced the factory radio. It was a major
    improvement by adding an Alpine CDA-9827 that did MP3/WMA/CD. The only
    thing I lost was the "steering" wheel remote, but, that was already on
    the fritz so it was no big loss! The Alpine unit has its own remote
    and it helps when listening to CD ROMS containing MP3/WMA files.
     
    Ron Jeremy, Jul 5, 2005
    #2
  3. Guest

    rjdriver Guest

    You will definitely notice an improvement with better speakers. They
    are usually the weak point in stock Honda car systems. But doing it in
    stages might not be a good idea, as you'll want to match the watt handling
    capability (and ohms, of course) of the new speakers with what your current
    front end puts out for best efficiency. This could limit you in your
    chioces of a new amp/front end, as you will probably want to get more power
    in both items.

    If there's not going to be a long time gap in between the two upgrades,
    it wont' hurt to get higher watt speakers for your current low watt stereo,
    you'll just have to crank the volume knob further to get the same amount of
    sound, and it won't sound like the improvemnt you hope for until both ends
    match properly. I would do them together. And don't skimp on the cables
    that connect the amp.


    Bob
     
    rjdriver, Jul 5, 2005
    #3
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