hey Provo, have you thought about trying to do a starlight headliner for a 4runner 4 gen video? that would be really cool if you could not only archive it, but also explain step by step how you achived it.
He bought a hardness adapter so you tie in the positive to the positive side and the negative on the negative side by (soldering, twisting or taping the cables ) test and close everything back together.. ( I do the twisting of the cables as the speaker has little holes you can run the cable thru and then twist I’m old school lol
Assuming you have the JBL amplifier, that JBL amp only takes 2 channels of input from the radio (factory or aftermarket), and all adjustments are made at the amp. So the rear tweeters are technically on their own channels, separate from the rear door speakers. Often times OEM speakers for JBL are 2 ohm, not 4.
Parts used linked in the description of the video!
thanks from New Zealand
hey Provo, have you thought about trying to do a starlight headliner for a 4runner 4 gen video? that would be really cool if you could not only archive it, but also explain step by step how you achived it.
wait how'd you connect the red wires . any special tools needed or just plug in
He bought a hardness adapter so you tie in the positive to the positive side and the negative on the negative side by (soldering, twisting or taping the cables ) test and close everything back together.. ( I do the twisting of the cables as the speaker has little holes you can run the cable thru and then twist I’m old school lol
@@mariop.2758 thank you
would this effect the tweeters on the rear pillar if you use a 2 way speaker in the rear door?
Assuming you have the JBL amplifier, that JBL amp only takes 2 channels of input from the radio (factory or aftermarket), and all adjustments are made at the amp. So the rear tweeters are technically on their own channels, separate from the rear door speakers. Often times OEM speakers for JBL are 2 ohm, not 4.