Starship Enterprise
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
OK, this subject has been talked about ad nauseum. Do we need a new thread on it? Probably not. But if it helps someone upgrade the 2 speakers without having to look at 10 different threads, why not?
I put in the Pioneer 10” subwoofer.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07JVD1ZHV?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1
Red Wolf adapters (These made the new Pioneer sub literally a plug and play!)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B089Q9K9Z6?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title
The 4 bar grill
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01H9IL29S?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1
And replaced the center speaker with the Dayton Audio 3.5” speaker.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Q3M9852?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title
Pioneer 10” sub:
Drops right in as everybody said. I rotated it ever so slightly so I could drill new holes in the sub box to mount it. Drill extra small holes!!! The screws need to bite. Sounds better but not much boomier. What did happen is that it had better soundwaves which allowed all the other speakers to sound better. (I have the B&O 12 speaker system). I noticed significantly better sound out the side woofers! It just made the whole sound system sound better overall. This sub replaces the stock 4 ohm dual coil with the same specs. By using the stock holes on the Pioneer, I saved about an hour of drilling and bending the metal ring and was now able to put the Pioneer trim ring on. And you can’t really notice the Pioneer logo is slightly tilted.
I drilled 4 new holes and put the grill over.
Things I noticed while listening to different songs on XM Sirius:
- Folding down the back seat lets more sound up front
- In Surround mode, the sound is fuller and more spatial, but if you isolate the sub with the fader, some songs struggle with the sub…you can hear a distinct squealing and unpleasant audio artifacts….but it depends on the song.
- In Stereo the sound is much stronger at the cost of being less spacial, but the sub is stronger and shows no bad sound artifacts.
Dayton Audio 3.5” Center Speaker.
I got this speaker because the OEM center speaker is 8 ohm, 12.5 watts. This speaker is also 8 ohm, which I believe won’t upset the sound balance.
Center grill pops right off. Just held on with 4 clips. Just pop off with trim removal tool. Remove the 2 screws, Unclip the connector, and snip the wires and solder them to the new speaker. If you look close + and - are marked on both speaker terminals.
Now here’s the hard part. The new speaker holes don’t come anywhere close to lining up with the two stock screw holes in the dash. There’s also no room to drill new holes as the windshield is just 2 inches above the opening. I thought about it a while and determined, if 3M tape can hold on my front splitter, louvers, rear spoiler, and side louvers, they can hold a little speaker on the dash.
So I peeled the foam tape off the new speaker, and double taped inside the little recessed sections underneath inside the metal ring recess, so the final ring of 3M tape has a flat surface to stick to. Then I trimmed the little plastic alignment tab off the center dash, and laid down a ring of 3M tape to the dash to receive the speaker. I connected the wire clip, dropped in the speaker and secured the edge of the ring with more thin strips of 3M tape. I determined it is NOT going anywhere! The speaker grill clipped on top of it…. no problem.
Testing the sound, I feel a massive improvement!
For now still going with Surround and having at least one back seat folded down to let more sound up front.
Hope this helped anyone considering replacing the sub and center speaker!
Pioneer sub with 4 bar grill.
CENTER SPEAKER
Mounting holes not even close!
New vs. old
Showing how the little strips of 3M tape fill the recesses in the speaker ring.
OEM clip soldered on to new speaker
Final ring of 3M tape around new speaker for mounting.
New speaker mounted with 3M tape. Don’t laugh…it worked! OK…lol.
Center Speaker Grill Clipped right back on. (Phew)
I put in the Pioneer 10” subwoofer.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07JVD1ZHV?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1
Red Wolf adapters (These made the new Pioneer sub literally a plug and play!)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B089Q9K9Z6?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title
The 4 bar grill
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01H9IL29S?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1
And replaced the center speaker with the Dayton Audio 3.5” speaker.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Q3M9852?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title
Pioneer 10” sub:
Drops right in as everybody said. I rotated it ever so slightly so I could drill new holes in the sub box to mount it. Drill extra small holes!!! The screws need to bite. Sounds better but not much boomier. What did happen is that it had better soundwaves which allowed all the other speakers to sound better. (I have the B&O 12 speaker system). I noticed significantly better sound out the side woofers! It just made the whole sound system sound better overall. This sub replaces the stock 4 ohm dual coil with the same specs. By using the stock holes on the Pioneer, I saved about an hour of drilling and bending the metal ring and was now able to put the Pioneer trim ring on. And you can’t really notice the Pioneer logo is slightly tilted.
I drilled 4 new holes and put the grill over.
Things I noticed while listening to different songs on XM Sirius:
- Folding down the back seat lets more sound up front
- In Surround mode, the sound is fuller and more spatial, but if you isolate the sub with the fader, some songs struggle with the sub…you can hear a distinct squealing and unpleasant audio artifacts….but it depends on the song.
- In Stereo the sound is much stronger at the cost of being less spacial, but the sub is stronger and shows no bad sound artifacts.
Dayton Audio 3.5” Center Speaker.
I got this speaker because the OEM center speaker is 8 ohm, 12.5 watts. This speaker is also 8 ohm, which I believe won’t upset the sound balance.
Center grill pops right off. Just held on with 4 clips. Just pop off with trim removal tool. Remove the 2 screws, Unclip the connector, and snip the wires and solder them to the new speaker. If you look close + and - are marked on both speaker terminals.
Now here’s the hard part. The new speaker holes don’t come anywhere close to lining up with the two stock screw holes in the dash. There’s also no room to drill new holes as the windshield is just 2 inches above the opening. I thought about it a while and determined, if 3M tape can hold on my front splitter, louvers, rear spoiler, and side louvers, they can hold a little speaker on the dash.
So I peeled the foam tape off the new speaker, and double taped inside the little recessed sections underneath inside the metal ring recess, so the final ring of 3M tape has a flat surface to stick to. Then I trimmed the little plastic alignment tab off the center dash, and laid down a ring of 3M tape to the dash to receive the speaker. I connected the wire clip, dropped in the speaker and secured the edge of the ring with more thin strips of 3M tape. I determined it is NOT going anywhere! The speaker grill clipped on top of it…. no problem.
Testing the sound, I feel a massive improvement!
For now still going with Surround and having at least one back seat folded down to let more sound up front.
Hope this helped anyone considering replacing the sub and center speaker!
Pioneer sub with 4 bar grill.
CENTER SPEAKER
Mounting holes not even close!
New vs. old
Showing how the little strips of 3M tape fill the recesses in the speaker ring.
OEM clip soldered on to new speaker
Final ring of 3M tape around new speaker for mounting.
New speaker mounted with 3M tape. Don’t laugh…it worked! OK…lol.
Center Speaker Grill Clipped right back on. (Phew)
Sponsored
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