Anyone know the specs for factory speakers?

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Mike T

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Mar 25, 2018
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Luke,

Back in the 60s - 70s - 80s car sound was not considered a big selling point to the vast majority of buyers, so sound systems & quality were not even close to what they are now. Having lived through all of those years and then some, I remember making changes to the sound on most of what I drove.
Back then, most radios had about 15 to 40 watts total amplification at 4 or 8 ohms. Domestic usually 8 ohm, foreign often 4 ohm. Replacing the stock speakers with some lower rated aftermarkets will give you much better sound but will not help much with total volume or sound intensity. In other words, the mirror ain't gonna vibrate. Also, even lower rated speakers will be under driven by the radio so after a certain point, the harder you drive them with the stock radio the more distortion you are gonna get. However, at moderate volumes, the sound should be far better than stock.

I know that they are not rated the best and are definitely not the most expensive on the market but i have been buying Sony decks for about 25 yrs now and have never been disappointed, except when I didn't spend that extra $40 to get the features I wanted. For any Sony deck over $140, the sound was great. (Audiophiles will argue, but most of us are not sound purists) I find that the Sony decks have as good or better sound specs as decks that are much more expensive.

As far as speakers go, for a lot of what is out there, you are often paying higher prices for the brand name, not the quality. For every day, decent, quality sound, I used to buy Blaupunk speakers. I don't know what they cost now but they used to be 20% cheaper than Kicker etc. but had the same specs.

Good Luck
 

airboatgreg

Comic Book Super Hero
Oct 2, 2016
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For the money an upgrade on only the speakers is way worth it. I usually do that when I buy another truck
 
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UNGN

Comic Book Super Hero
Sep 6, 2016
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Get the Metra adapters for 4x10 to 6x9 conversion. It's a little more work, but well worth it.

You beat me to it. 6X9's sound much better than a 4X10.
 

synoptic12

Greasemonkey
Jun 10, 2012
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Use a 4 ohm speaker for stereo. If you wish to have more power and a monaural sound, wire them in 'parallel' to obtain a 2 ohm. I've used both set-ups and really prefer the 4 ohm ambiance (stereo) of rock and roll, 'more clarity' as opposed to 2 ohms which provide more power but at a cost (higher temps). My Dodge Challenger has a Boston Acoustics system with 2 ohm speakers; "plenty of power" but I still prefer 4 ohms. Someone mentioned in a earlier post of 8 ohms. That was true many moons ago and those were some great, great speakers. I used some 8 ohms in a Craig Powerplay (8-Track) 'Still have it' > and that produced a 100 db sound rating.
*Past experience as a radio technician.
 
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synoptic12

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Jun 10, 2012
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You beat me to it. 6X9's sound much better than a 4X10.

That is not necessarily true. One must match the output of the radio (receiver) to the speakers. There are axial speakers, dual axial and tri-axial. I've found the duals in 8 ohm to be the best for power and relative good clarity, without moving to package (Component) speakers consisting of mids, tweets, and sub-woofers. I used a football speaker (We call them that 4x10) (4 ohms) in my 86' Olds and they worked really well with a Sony 2 channel amp. I used them in parallel to produce 2 ohms. As well, I used the front 3 1/2 in parallel to produce 2 ohm impedance. great power but not really stereo. The problem is getting anything to fit in the dash (3 1/2). If you used just tweets, the level would be too bright. Therefore, a mid is required to produce timbre and the tweets and the midrange must be positioned within a certain distance. I've found my vehicle (86' Olds) one of the worst to install any kind of sound system (Without chopping up the car).
 
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fleming442

Captain Tenneal
Dec 26, 2013
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Use a 4 ohm speaker for stereo. If you wish to have more power and a monaural sound, wire them in series to obtain a 2 ohm. I've used both set-ups and really prefer the 4 ohm ambiance (stereo) of rock and roll, 'more clarity' as opposed to 2 ohms which provide more power but at a cost (higher temps). My Dodge Challenger has a Boston Acoustics system with 2 ohm speakers; "plenty of power" but I still prefer 4 ohms. Someone mentioned in a earlier post of 8 ohms. That was true many moons ago and those were some great, great speakers. I used some 8 ohms in a Craig Powerplay (8-Track) 'Still have it' > and that produced a 100 db sound rating.
*Past experience as a radio technician.
Hmmmm, 2-4ohm speakers in series is 8. Parallel is 2, and the only reason it sounds different is the distortion level from the amp.
 
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64nailhead

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Dec 1, 2014
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