What the F
Just a thought, if you dont know where to start, you might be better off bringing it to a shop and letting them do it.
But yes, you need a Line output converter. As opposed to what kcid said, Ive always wired Bose l.o.c.'s after the bose amp. But anyway, wire that in, and run RCA's from that to the amp. Run power, remote, ground, and speaker wire and your done.
But yes, you need a Line output converter. As opposed to what kcid said, Ive always wired Bose l.o.c.'s after the bose amp. But anyway, wire that in, and run RCA's from that to the amp. Run power, remote, ground, and speaker wire and your done.
Hmmm, I know the reason why we didn't run it after the amps on the 3rd gen was because it was 1 ohm stable. Plus, it just sounded like crap because the signal that was received.
Maybe it works just fine on the newer setups
Maybe it works just fine on the newer setups
Originally Posted by kpr10is
Just a thought, if you dont know where to start, you might be better off bringing it to a shop and letting them do it.
But yes, you need a Line output converter. As opposed to what kcid said, Ive always wired Bose l.o.c.'s after the bose amp. But anyway, wire that in, and run RCA's from that to the amp. Run power, remote, ground, and speaker wire and your done.
But yes, you need a Line output converter. As opposed to what kcid said, Ive always wired Bose l.o.c.'s after the bose amp. But anyway, wire that in, and run RCA's from that to the amp. Run power, remote, ground, and speaker wire and your done.
Originally Posted by kcidmil
Hmmm, I know the reason why we didn't run it after the amps on the 3rd gen was because it was 1 ohm stable. Plus, it just sounded like crap because the signal that was received.
Maybe it works just fine on the newer setups
Maybe it works just fine on the newer setups




