
Originally Posted by
Mercguy
I didn't want to come over all authoritarian or make it sound like I am some kind of car audio guru - but I have been around the stuff for over 3 decades and the sad reality is the industry is SMALL. And it doesn't change...
Leon is still at soundlabs, Marty still has FHRX studios and Drew still runs Northfield in Brisvegas - and it's been that way since moses was a kid. and I could go on about the who's who, but those are three guys who were into it before I got my drivers license.
I especially learned a lot from Leon when discussing Becker installs in Mercedes, and Drew and Marty have helped do custom work for me several times over the years.
Problem with car audio is the chasm between quality and price. literally nothing good is cheap. For example, I had a maybe 15 year old pioneer reference single din headunit (well outdated) in the RRC until xmas, when I replaced it with a flip up carplay unit... the new unit (not a pioneer reference standard head unit) was over a grand. It's good, but it's not what I'd call reference. I put that in the RRC to make my trip north bearable and for a bit of iphone connectivity (hands free) and it's great for that, but there's no real grunt in the head unit....
and be buggered if I was going to pull out my old Focal reference monoblocks for a range rover install. But being the "fool" I still parted with dosh to get some decent drivers in there and while focal flax drivers aren't everyones cuppa, they are what I call decent. Not priced like utopia Be or Morels or Dynaudios, but these have to 'handle' the RRC environment, which I know for a fact a dynaudio wouldn't...
If that all sounds like jargon, let me get to the point from another tangent.
The law of diminishing returns applies to car audio just like it does to getting power out of a 3.9 v8. Standard is barely adequate, but you can live with it - but to get what you want, you're going to throw close to 10K at a stereo, before you can actually qualify it as 'sounds great'
How so?
Head unit - 1k-4K budget depending on your erm.... 'preferences' (can you really afford that Naka on ebay?)
multichannel amp - 1500-5000 - brand and specification and number of channels - more you want, price goes up.
dynamat/dynaliner - 800-2000 depending on how much of the car and what stage you need/want (materials only)
custom fitout work - $150-200 per hour for someone who is a Professional (and trust me, that's cheap for what you get- not just peace of mind that your car's electrics and interior are going to survive an install)
Cabling - if you love monster cable and you think you need six 1 farad caps... well say hello to the moths in your wallet that you haven't seen before.... - but 500-1k will get you a proper pro install for all power and speaker cabling, all the connectors and busbar etc
And I'm not adjusting for 2023 inflation....
Then you need to actually spend time and callibrate/tune the system - both to the frequency response and resonant peaks in the vehicle AND the owners personal music taste.... which has a huge effect on the actual EQ'ing of the system (moreso if they have no taste and use low quality mp3's as source sound)
Now I hope that is a solid foundation on why car stereo installs are both expensive and time consuming.
Not only does a professional installer know how to make it sound good, they can do it at nearly every budget point, and explain the limitations at certain price points - because not everyone has a vault full of gold bullion under their bed.
You can EQ your own system if your headunit has time alignment functions and EQ adjustments, and that will take all the guesswork out of the setup for you with a minimum of fuss - but you will pay more for the headunit...
Or if you are a propellerhead, you can use TA/EQ/sweep generators on a laptop and a high quality studio mic to sample the vehicles interior, and then custom eq or build crossovers etc, if that is what you want to do to get the desired result (and can be done on a tight budget - just takes a LOT of time)
Back in the day, it was buy a headunit, buy some aftermarket speakers, cut a hole in the doorcard and screw them in, run the wire through the doorjamb under the dash and into a fresh hole you just massacred in your first car's dashboard/console (did they have a centre console back then???) and that was that - you had FM radio and a cassette deck and you could play your mates mix tapes while the headunit was cranked to distortion+ levels and everything sounded 'better'... but really let's face it, it was **** and we still loved it.
Then someone decided that you could put home audio stuff in cars.... then we got car power amplifiers and graphic equalizers with flashing LED's and then CD players were the rage.... then double din CD and DVD players and then screens and now it's all on a phone and plugged into the MOST bus on the integrated audio system in your fancypants corolla or kia rio.
The RRC was designed when 8 track players were cool.
Vehicle audio acoustics were not foremost in the minds of the design engineers.
we're almost 5 decades on. Your phone has more smarts than ten thousand RRC's brains wired together.
Your phone can play music and generally speaking has better acoustics than the range rover.
If you think about it, the best way forward is to simply have some kind of receiver/amp that your phone can plug into and charge or connect via bluetooth or wifi, and use the phone smarts rather than buy another piece of car audio boat anchor that will be obsolete in 2 years.
Spend money on multichannel amps for high power and good clean audio signal, and buy some decent component speakers - 2 or 3 way with a passive crossover, pay a reputable installer a fair price to do the install and tune it for you, then enjoy it.
or DIY it, and take your time, save some $$$
When you go down this rabbit hole, it starts to cost money. very quickly. I'd urge restraint and spend the money on the things that help the vehicles NVH levels before upgrading the stereo.
and yes, it's very easy to spend 2 grand on dynamat extreme and dynaliner etc. but it makes a world of difference if it's done properly.
There's 500 bucks worth of material consumed in the roof alone. - good time to redo the headliner as well if it's showing signs of droop or ageing.
Also - if you do DIY - be prepared to deal with some really ugly discoveries..... like rust. or butchered wiring harnesses. Attend to that stuff as best you can - but don't ignore it, or your dynamat install will be a waste of time.
I see potential money pit in a stereo install. It IS wasted money if you ever decide to sell the car - does nothign for the overall value whatsoever, so also keep that in mind....
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