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Thank you Vector! I was planning on going the 10" sub route in the lower trunk but I really like the idea of having everything look OEM. And what you described above sounds like it would be extremely affordable, especially if I do it myself. Eliminates the LC2i/LC7i and it eliminates the need for a separate amp for the sub. And the sub is relatively cheap.

Are you using the wired remote for the KSC-SW11 at all? Or have you managed to find a setting that works for all the music you listen to? Last time I installed a sub in a car (15 years ago) I was having to constantly adjust the sub level depending on the song.

How long did it take you to do your install? I'd love to attempt this myself.
 
I used the Amp as suggested in the original post by @PLUR, the Alpine KTP-445U purchased on Amazon for 119.99. I hid it as user @fstr did behind the rear right seat shoulder panel. I'll attach his image below and mine is in the exact location. The sub provides plenty of power for me. It kicks and I don't even have it halfway turned up...and yes, even though I don't really listen to rap, I did test a couple songs and it does carry a good bass reverberation throughout. It also doesn't draw too much power from the Penthouse along with the Alpine Amp wired to the same place - so no car power errors for me. I've had nice audio setups in all my cars after doing the work myself, but I was the most apprehensive of doing anything to a Tesla. However, it is probably the cleanest and best sounding setup I have ever experienced after the work was all said and done.

I did not use the LC2i or LC7i, however I did use a couple of old Infinity component filters I had laying around to separate the treble to the front door mirror tweeter speakers. It does work without it however, as I also wired it up without those using the HPF or high pass filter on the Alpine Amp and pulling the input sound from the rear door speakers for the left and right channels in 2 channel mode, which will output the 2 channels to both the front mirror speakers and the rear shelf speakers on all four channels. For anyone thinking of doing this BTW, I did read @PLUR original post a good 8 to 10 times before even beginning. Some of the images were not immediately comprehended until I started pulling things apart for myself to see how my car matched up with the images. My car was only delivered to me on June 30th, so it's a super recent build, but matches up with everything from the @PLUR post.
Do you have a picture of your mounted sub? thanks!
 
How did you manage to not use a line output converter?
On the Alpine KTP445U there is only RCA inputs on the wiring harness, but if you thouroughly read the instructions, you can use line level inputs if you cut off the RCA Jack's and the directly connect the wires from your left and right speakers. Just be mindful of polarity.
 
Do you have a picture of your mounted sub? thanks!
I wish I was more thoughtful when I had everything apart, but I didn't think to take pictures. If I ever happen to pull things apart again, I'll take them then. Maybe if I dynamat or something, but I've had no issues with vibrations in my setup. There is plenty of room for the sub I mentioned though and you can use the placeholder bracket to trace out a mount if you're good with woodwork to mount the sub and face it toward the outer wall.
 
Thank you Vector! I was planning on going the 10" sub route in the lower trunk but I really like the idea of having everything look OEM. And what you described above sounds like it would be extremely affordable, especially if I do it myself. Eliminates the LC2i/LC7i and it eliminates the need for a separate amp for the sub. And the sub is relatively cheap.

Are you using the wired remote for the KSC-SW11 at all? Or have you managed to find a setting that works for all the music you listen to? Last time I installed a sub in a car (15 years ago) I was having to constantly adjust the sub level depending on the song.

How long did it take you to do your install? I'd love to attempt this myself.
Took me a good 10 hours. Maybe some are faster than I, but I took my time and was super careful the whole way I used the sub remote to set the volume and frequency, but after I tuned it, I put it behind the carpeted panel where the sub is, because I wanted an OEM feel; something clean that didn't always need to be messed with.
 
If you still having issue with the tweeters and speakers overpowering, try this setup that I currently run. Using the LC7i in combo with alpine, I can set the volume really low on speakers.

I have the rear doors speakers splits to 4channel(=8wires) > go to LC7i main+ch1 input>LC7i output main+ch1 go to alpine input for front+rear. Set alpine jumper to 4ch and speaker input(non-rca). LC7i jumper, make sure to NOT to sum signal of main and ch1. Rear speaker set to gain 2o'clock on LC7i and 11o'clock on alpine, tweeter set to gain 9'o'clock on LC7i and 9o'clock on alpine. --Adjust to your liking if needed.
Thanks! I finished installing my LC7i today but elected not to split the rear doors into 4 channel. I kept it summed and output to only "front" on the alpine amp. The output level adjustment was what I needed to tone down the rear deck and tweeters. Sounds great now!
 
SR+ here. Trying to enable the 4 speakers and add a sub. I am looking for a short explanation on why I need a LC7i vs a LC2i. I know the LC2i will allow me to add some of the low frequencies back in for the additional sub. And it provides a cleaner signal. But why do I need the additional channels? It is for the other 4 speakers I am enabling? Is it to provide some independent volume/gain control on those? Doesn’t the amp already provide that or is the amp one adjustment for all outputs and that is where the LC7i comes in?
 
Alpine Amp and pulling the input sound from the rear door speakers for the left and right channels in 2 channel mode, which will output the 2 channels to both the front mirror speakers and the rear shelf speakers on all four channels.
Thanks for the info. Can you give some more info on your specific wiring, like the inputs and outputs? I'm currently wiring up my system with a 5-channel amp to utilize a 4-channel speaker input/output, and 1 channel subwoofer, but if I can get away with just a 4-channel I'd much rather to that before going any further.
 
Ok to anyone still following, the rear deck speakers are a MUST!!!. HOLY COW, the clarity it adds to music is amazing. The door tweeters are ok, the SR has been turned to push so much to the front the door tweeters don't do much.

I'm moving on to the sub in the trunk and it's been a B**** not for the faint of heart but I managed to make a huge sub big with all the space in the old sub space.

Here's a half way pic, I'm still at least 10 hours to go.
Image
 
I'm hoping that at some point someone becomes a specialist in Tesla stereos. I have the SR+ and would love to upgrade. I don't want to do the work myself (and am afraid I'd short the whole car out!).
 
I'm hoping that at some point someone becomes a specialist in Tesla stereos. I have the SR+ and would love to upgrade. I don't want to do the work myself (and am afraid I'd short the whole car out!).
I'm semi handy, the car is held together with plastic clips and push clips. If you take your time it's incredibly easy and can be done in a few hours. Try to just do the rear deck speakers and you'll be blown away! Also you can't short the whole car, Tesla used bright orange cables for high voltage you can't miss them, and they are also huge.
 
Discussion starter · #98 ·
All is reversible.
That 4ch pioneer one.. it doesn't have the volume control on the amp, don't recommend.
Well spotted. How about this one, has volume controls and speaker level input!

Kenwood KACPS404 4 Channel Power Amplifier, 550 W

Also, is the high pass filter enough or do I need bass blockers for the tweeters, and what kind of cable is needed to connect the 12v accessory to the amp?
 
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