difference between the powercore/powergrid?
- thedeal7235
- Posts: 1866
- Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 7:49 pm
- Location: Sanford, Florida(orlando area)
difference between the powercore/powergrid?
i looked on the manuels under car audio, but only found more install, then actual specs. so who knows this, i know the grid said equal to 10farad, but is the powercore more or less? and, am i understanding it correctly as it staes it has internal fuses?? or, would you still fuse before ur amp, or fuse before the powercore/grid? Thanks Christian
as she walked out the door she expressed, 'enjoy your amp addiction'
- brenzbmr@sb
- Booty Connoisseur
- Posts: 1610
- Joined: Wed Dec 06, 2006 9:49 pm
- Location: as ziggy marley said" on a beach in hawaii"
- thedeal7235
- Posts: 1866
- Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 7:49 pm
- Location: Sanford, Florida(orlando area)
exactly, your supposed to fuse before a cap; but i cant see any info on the initial question I posted under manuels, and briefly read some have fuses built in?, if you read what i asked about, so thats why i asked , instead of A-S-S-U-M-I-N-G
as she walked out the door she expressed, 'enjoy your amp addiction'
Old topic, but I have a question about fusing the Powercore 15.
My setup:
0/1 AWG power leads
Ti800.1
Ti500.4
Basscube
Powercore 15
I have 1 fuse of 180Amp next to the battery.
- Do I need to put another fuse right before the Powercore??
- Or between the powercore and both amps ??
- Or no extra fuses ??
Only 1 fuse at the battery seems kinda little ??
Has Pg got single Ti style fuse holders for 0/1 AWG ?
My setup:
0/1 AWG power leads
Ti800.1
Ti500.4
Basscube
Powercore 15
I have 1 fuse of 180Amp next to the battery.
- Do I need to put another fuse right before the Powercore??
- Or between the powercore and both amps ??
- Or no extra fuses ??
Only 1 fuse at the battery seems kinda little ??
Has Pg got single Ti style fuse holders for 0/1 AWG ?
i've got the same sorta setup as above... but i've often wondered if i need more fuses somewhere. i do know that you don't want resistance after the cap which is what a fuse provides resistance.
Last edited by Stryker on Sun Feb 15, 2009 4:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I had an answer half typed out as to why I didn't think it would matter to have a fuse on a cap until it dawned on me. If the wire were to short out between the fuse and the cap(firewall for example), it would pop the fuse under the hood but it would also then leave the cap shorted out to do what ever it might do until it is discharged. With this in mind it would be a good idea to put a fuse directly infront of the cap. You could fuse the ground wire on the cap which should not effect the voltage going through it too badly.
Because a fuse is such a short distance, it really offers negligible resistance to the line... think about it, if you've got a big fuse up at the front by the battery, you would think you already have very little power in the back of the car... however with 0 gauge you still get 250 amps.
So ideally you would fuse between the powercore and the amps, to protect from shorting out the amps power wires. The powercore should already be sufficiently protected by the fuse near the battery, but you can add one immediately before it if you are super anal.
So ideally you would fuse between the powercore and the amps, to protect from shorting out the amps power wires. The powercore should already be sufficiently protected by the fuse near the battery, but you can add one immediately before it if you are super anal.
- HoseHead
- Tim Horton Himself
- Posts: 2262
- Joined: Wed Dec 06, 2006 4:49 pm
- Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
- Contact:
You should fuse within 18 inches of the battery.
This is designed to protect the car, not the sound system.
If you somehow experience a short to ground in the "back", this fuse will blow before your battery explodes, your regulator pooches or your alternator burns up.
An additional fuse in the B+ line (unless the device is fused ie Tantrum amps) to each device will protect that device.
This fusing will protect the device should a short to ground happen in the device.
Both are recommended.
HH
This is designed to protect the car, not the sound system.
If you somehow experience a short to ground in the "back", this fuse will blow before your battery explodes, your regulator pooches or your alternator burns up.
An additional fuse in the B+ line (unless the device is fused ie Tantrum amps) to each device will protect that device.
This fusing will protect the device should a short to ground happen in the device.
Both are recommended.
HH
The only stupid question is the one not asked .......
Again if you fuse it between the cap and the amp, and the power wire shorts out at the fire wall what happens? You will still dump every electron that thing has stored, throw some sparks and weld something to your chassis.stipud wrote:Because a fuse is such a short distance, it really offers negligible resistance to the line... think about it, if you've got a big fuse up at the front by the battery, you would think you already have very little power in the back of the car... however with 0 gauge you still get 250 amps.
So ideally you would fuse between the powercore and the amps, to protect from shorting out the amps power wires. The powercore should already be sufficiently protected by the fuse near the battery, but you can add one immediately before it if you are super anal.
Again if you were to fuse the GROUND cable going to the cap it will protect the cap if it shorts out in either direction.
In that case you would want to add a fuse before the cap on the power wire.ttocs wrote:Again if you fuse it between the cap and the amp, and the power wire shorts out at the fire wall what happens? You will still dump every electron that thing has stored, throw some sparks and weld something to your chassis.
Again if you were to fuse the GROUND cable going to the cap it will protect the cap if it shorts out in either direction.
So to properly (anally) fuse a powercore
Battery - Fuse ----------------- Fuse - Powercore -------- Amp Fuse - Amp
This level of fusing is required to compete in IASCA and similar.
Good idea in theory, but not in practice. Many amps are still grounded by their chassis, or (as longboard mentioned) are commonly grounded through RCAs, etc. You would need to fuse every possible ground, which is not feasible, and could cause cascading failures which would be impossible to diagnose. If you could simplify automotive circuits by fusing ground rather than power, it would be commonplace in cars.ttocs wrote:by fusing the ground cable though, it would protect the power wire from being shorted on either side(amp or battery).
I see what you're saying, but either way you would require a fuse on the power wire or ground wire of a cap, so I see no benefit to installing it on the ground.