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I recently replaced all of my speakers save for the subwoofer with OE Bose speakers and they definitely made a difference in sound quality in my fifteen year old truck. More bass now too. Some companies in the past made replacement door speaker kits that bolted right up but are not made anymore. During my learning, all the aftermarket speakers have to be modified or adapters used to attach then to our truck, same for the connectors. Being quite ignorant on the subject of stereo system and having a hard time learning it, I stuck with GM OE.Have a new question - I'm trying to get the most out of my Bose system in the Denali but don't want to replace the stock amp or head unit before I leave for my trip as I need to do a lot more reading about some of the issues like steering wheel controls, etc.
But I am interested in making a first step by upgrading the speakers and perhaps looking at the rest of the system next year.
First - is this even possible to make the system sound better without swapping out the stock amp? If it is possible, can you suggest some good speakers to upgrade to?
I don't really know anything here, so any advice would be great!
My kids and I spend a lot of time in the truck and we like our music loud, crisp and sounding amazing!
I'm good with spending some money on this if the sound quality improves significantly.
Have a new question - I'm trying to get the most out of my Bose system in the Denali but don't want to replace the stock amp or head unit before I leave for my trip as I need to do a lot more reading about some of the issues like steering wheel controls, etc.
But I am interested in making a first step by upgrading the speakers and perhaps looking at the rest of the system next year.
First - is this even possible to make the system sound better without swapping out the stock amp? If it is possible, can you suggest some good speakers to upgrade to?
I don't really know anything here, so any advice would be great!
My kids and I spend a lot of time in the truck and we like our music loud, crisp and sounding amazing!
I'm good with spending some money on this if the sound quality improves significantly.
I was actually looking on crutchfied and came across these infinity speakers - Kappa 603CF. I noticed some people in the forums here talk about infinity positively plus I liked how they had a 3 year warranty. The reviews sounded encouraging as well.
Was thinking of starting with replacing the 4 door speakers and see where I go from there (want to do these before the trip) but can see going broader into the head unit, amp, sub, etc but won't get into this other stuff before the trip. My one challenge is that I won't be able to put anything in the trunk space as we usually travel with a lot of stuff for 7 of us.
These look like they hit at 3Ω.
Do you think these would make a difference and with the included wiring harness and some minor mods - are these an easy install?
Yes, for sure on the sound deadening. I've been researching it over the past couple of days and maybe I'll start with that and then move on to speakers and the rest of the system next year.I'm a fan Infinity, especially their Kappa line. Really, I like most all of Harman's brands. I have no experience installing those speakers so I can't comment on that. What I can say is if you're gonna have the door panels off to do audio upgrades, I'd strongly recommend sound insulation and damping. Doing this, alone (and properly), will make a drastic improvement even with the stock speakers, assuming they're not rotted or blown. You could travel rabbit holes for days researching the well-known brands (Dynamat, Fatmat, Kilmat, Second Skin to name a very few) and there are a few offerings on Amazon (Noico is the popular one there) that seem to be impressive underdogs. Resonix from Skizer was one I was really looking in to.
Yes, for sure on the sound deadening. I've been researching it over the past couple of days and maybe I'll start with that and then move on to speakers and the rest of the system next year.
Question on the sound deadening - in watching several videos, I've seen some people cover the entire door panel and I've seen others stating you only need to cover 30%. Which is the right answer or is it somewhere in between? I'm pretty detailed in everything I do, so I'm good with covering the entire door and doing it right, but wasn't sure about the best methodology.
Also, is it true that I should wait for warmer weather for it to adhere better?
Well, I'm going to go down this rabbit hole over the next couple of weeks and do some overkill with it because I'm a little curious and interested. My brother used to do a bunch with acoustics, so I'm going to give it a go.IIRC, the Denali's have additional sound deadening materials and insulation already installed. I know ours are both very quiet going down the highway. I've never felt the need to upgrade the sound insulation in either of ours. Makes me wonder what the difference between it and SLT/SLE models really is.