Most of our receivers except our K models and the 922 receivers, have a coax port labeled TV Antenna In/Over The Air Antenna In. This allows you to receive the alternate local channels in your area.
The K models and 922 receivers required an OTA module that plugs into the back of the receiver. With this module, you can receive the alternate local channels.
If the receiver is just stereo, not surround sound, you will not be able to create a surround sound (front, centre, sub, surround) setup.
By bridging a sub it means that you are combining the power of two channels of your power amplifier into one, which then runs your sub. Not all power amplifiers are bridgeable though.
regular
inverted its a thing of style or the guy that built the box he didn't measure the depth of the sub
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Junction box for what? Do you mean a sub panel?
as far as i know there is only one amp and it powers the sub woofer. it is located in back, in the panel beside the sub woofer. pull off the panel covering the sub and look up to the left of the sub and there is a little gray metal box and a wire going from it into the sub box. the little metal box is the amp.
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It is located behind the windshield washer bottle. It is under cover where the clips are by the bottle. There maybe a sub-fuse box behind the passengers side panel in the truck. The sub panel has a door with big slots that have to be turned. If there are no slots then there is no sub-fuse box
You can connect a sub and speakers to one amp, depending on how many channels your amp has. A 4 channel amp will be able to run one (or two) subs using two channels (one bridged* sub or two subs) and two speakers running one channel each. A 2 channel amp will run 2 speakers or one bridged sub. A 6 channel amp will run one bridged sub (or two subs), 2 front speakers and 2 rear speakers. In my opinion, you will get the most performance, depending on which amps you use, by using a monoblock amp for your sub and an amp with enough channels to run all of your speakers. # Bridged = putting together the power of two channels to run one sub or speaker. Note: not all amps are bridgeable.
Standard OTA (Over the air) television channels are able to use about 19.3Mbps. If it's a channel that has several sub-channels for example 38.1 or 38.2 then they have to divide the 19.3Mbps up between the sub-channels. Generally speaking channels that are standard definition use anywhere from 4Mbps-7Mbps. High definition channels generally use anywhere from 10-15Mbps. When dealing with content that is on cable/Satellite though things change because different content providers compress each network different amounts.
That's where u bridge the amp to combine both channels power into one sub.