EV6 speaker upgrade recommendations | Kia EV Forum
Kia EV Forum banner

What do you think about the sound system?

EV6 speaker upgrade recommendations

202K views 484 replies 87 participants last post by  BlueWire777  
Are folks going with the Rockville SS8P (or the Blaupunkt 8") simply because it's the least-expensive aftermarket sub solution at $100, especially given that the Kicker 46HS10 which quite a few other folks have chosen to use goes for $315? I can't imagine the bass performance of the Rockville 8" to be equally on par with that of the Kicker 10" so it's gotta be a cost thing...no?
 
FWIW I have the Rockville SS10P powered via the rear 12V socket; the SS10P utilizes a 20A fuse. In any case the SS10P is performing admirably well in my EV6--it won't wake up the neighborhood by any means but at least now I have some real sub-200 Hz bass in my vehicle.
 
The trunk socket is rated for 15 Amps. The Rockville 8 inch has a 15 Amps fuse as well. Anything larger than this could blow some fuses.

I did some testing with a 10 Amps fuse installed inside the cable socket and it burned out. No issues so far with 15 Amps fuses. I use a 15 Amps rated cable with a built-in fuse, the amp has a fuse and the car has one. I can say that I'm triple protected :)
The rear 12V socket may indeed be rated for 15A, but it turns out that it's protected by a 20A fuse--it's in the underhood fuse panel and is labeled "Power Outlet3". I verified that this fuse does indeed cover the rear outlet--I pulled the fuse and my Rockville went dead.
 
Here is the same page from Finnish language EV6 manual:

View attachment 13207
as you can see (yellow text) current value here is 15A, that is logical because 180W/12V(text on the socket cover) = 15A.
That is interesting to see; the U.S. owner's manual says 10A, yet both the front and rear 12V socket covers on my U.S.-spec EV6 have 12V/180W printed on them just like what you mentioned. If indeed the outlet is rated at 10A then there is no way one could or should safely plug in a 12V device that is capable of drawing more than 120W, yet the label implies that it is okay to do so.

So...is the directive in the U.S. owner's manual a misprint, is the socket cover label wrong, or is it a Kia USA CYA thing?

Still waiting for someone to offer an official explanation (i.e., not speculative guessing) as to why a 12V outlet that's supposedly rated at 10A is protected by a 20A fuse.
 
Class-action lawsuit to get Kia to address low rear-speaker output? Don't think any lawyer would bother spending their time taking on such a case--it's not as if low rear-speaker output adversely affects vehicle drivability and/or driver safety (warning chimes/alerts emanate from front speakers). Don't get me wrong--I would like nothing better than for Kia to fix the low rear-speaker output once and for all but IMHO it wouldn't and doesn't warrant a class-action lawsuit.