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Which fuse did you attached you power lead to for the amplifier
It’s the fuse that has 7.5 on it it’s the audio sub fuse, I normally have done the cigarette lighter fuse with every sub install I have done. The 7.5 amp fuse is the only fuse in the fuse box with 7.5 I’m pretty sure so it’s real easy to find.
 
It’s the fuse that has 7.5 on it it’s the audio sub fuse, I normally have done the cigarette lighter fuse with every sub install I have done. The 7.5 amp fuse is the only fuse in the fuse box with 7.5 I’m pretty sure so it’s real easy to find.
Is that the one under the hood or under the steering wheel? Thanks In advance
 
A buddy and I installed a Rockford Fosgate p300-12T subwoofer in my 2022 civic sport today --- I haven't found any info on installing a sub in a 22 civic, so I thought I would document the process here. We are not experts so use this guide at your own risk :) That said, the install turned out very clean and is completely reversible barring a small hole through a rubber grommet in the firewall.

Signal wires:

My sub has a built in amp that can tap Hi level inputs. I wanted to tap the front door speakers since those seem to provide the most bass (I could be wrong on this as I only used my ear as a reference). To find these wires, we popped the panel behind the head unit. It pops right off with a plastic trim lever. There is a wiring harness attached to some sensor? on the trim panel that we disconnected so we could fully remove the panel.

View attachment 5861
After removing the panel, here is a photo looking down at the backside of the head unit. The bottom wiring harness plugged into the head (the bottom wiring harness in this image) is a 24 pinout connector. The connector seems to have the same pinout as the 2020 civic connector shown here.
View attachment 5862


I used 16 gauge speaker wire to tap pins A15-A18 (front left and right speakers). Here is a photo of the tapped 24 pin connector.
View attachment 5863


After tapping this connector, we routed the speaker wire into the left side of the dash, over the top of steering column, and down towards the left side trim. It helps to tape a thin piece of wire to the beginning of speaker wires so you can fish them through the dash easier. Bend the tip of the wire so you don't scratch stuff.



These picture somewhat show how we routed the wires. (Note the red wire in these pictures is power from battery which I haven't talked about yet.)
View attachment 5864

View attachment 5865

We popped the piece of trim near at the front of the driver door to route the cables behind it.
View attachment 5866
I couldn't get a picture of the wires routed above the steering column. Sort of have to feel your way through with the fishing wire.

Power Wires
We took out the battery and battery holder to access a rubber grommet that feeds some cables through the firewall. We punched a hole through the bottom of the grommet as to not hit any of the wires:
There are other grommets you could use (e.g. hood release grommet), but this one gave us the most options for discretely routing the power cable through the engine bay.
View attachment 5870

We attached the inline fuse to the battery holder using a zip tie as shown here:
View attachment 5871
Note: We did this part as the very last step --- the battery should be unplugged during the install.

We attached the ground wire to a bolt attaching the backseats to the chassis.

Routing to Trunk


This is basically the same as 10th gen civics (see youtube videos).

We routed signal and power cables to the trunk down the left side of the vehicle (underneath the trim and carpet). We tried to keep signal and power cables as separated as possible. We removed the trim at the base of the front driver door, middle trim behind the front seatbelt, and popped the trim by the rear driver door up high enough to snake the wires to the trunk.


Next we removed the middle carpet piece in the trunk (one rivet centered behind the backseats):
View attachment 5868

We also pulled some rivets on the left carpet (shown in above image) to access that metal channel you see running along the backseats. We snaked our wires through that channel and pulled them out of one of the through holes.

Here is the finished product:


View attachment 5869



Important Oddities:

Sometimes after reattaching the 24 pinout and turning the car on, the head unit goes into lockout mode. All you have to do is start the car and hold the head unit power button. Also, all the warning indicators on the dash go on (TCS system, low pressure warning) and the dash says something like 'system calibrating, continue driving'. After installing everything, we drove about a mile and the dash reset to normal (all warning lights turned off). It seems certain counters are reset (my MPG rating reset to zero but everything seems completely normal.
You have the premium Bose audio ?
No I have the 2022 civic sport. My only 7.5 fuse is under the hood
 
A buddy and I installed a Rockford Fosgate p300-12T subwoofer in my 2022 civic sport today --- I haven't found any info on installing a sub in a 22 civic, so I thought I would document the process here. We are not experts so use this guide at your own risk :) That said, the install turned out very clean and is completely reversible barring a small hole through a rubber grommet in the firewall.

Signal wires:

My sub has a built in amp that can tap Hi level inputs. I wanted to tap the front door speakers since those seem to provide the most bass (I could be wrong on this as I only used my ear as a reference). To find these wires, we popped the panel behind the head unit. It pops right off with a plastic trim lever. There is a wiring harness attached to some sensor? on the trim panel that we disconnected so we could fully remove the panel.

View attachment 5861
After removing the panel, here is a photo looking down at the backside of the head unit. The bottom wiring harness plugged into the head (the bottom wiring harness in this image) is a 24 pinout connector. The connector seems to have the same pinout as the 2020 civic connector shown here.
View attachment 5862


I used 16 gauge speaker wire to tap pins A15-A18 (front left and right speakers). Here is a photo of the tapped 24 pin connector.
View attachment 5863


After tapping this connector, we routed the speaker wire into the left side of the dash, over the top of steering column, and down towards the left side trim. It helps to tape a thin piece of wire to the beginning of speaker wires so you can fish them through the dash easier. Bend the tip of the wire so you don't scratch stuff.



These picture somewhat show how we routed the wires. (Note the red wire in these pictures is power from battery which I haven't talked about yet.)
View attachment 5864

View attachment 5865

We popped the piece of trim near at the front of the driver door to route the cables behind it.
View attachment 5866
I couldn't get a picture of the wires routed above the steering column. Sort of have to feel your way through with the fishing wire.

Power Wires
We took out the battery and battery holder to access a rubber grommet that feeds some cables through the firewall. We punched a hole through the bottom of the grommet as to not hit any of the wires:
There are other grommets you could use (e.g. hood release grommet), but this one gave us the most options for discretely routing the power cable through the engine bay.
View attachment 5870

We attached the inline fuse to the battery holder using a zip tie as shown here:
View attachment 5871
Note: We did this part as the very last step --- the battery should be unplugged during the install.

We attached the ground wire to a bolt attaching the backseats to the chassis.

Routing to Trunk


This is basically the same as 10th gen civics (see youtube videos).

We routed signal and power cables to the trunk down the left side of the vehicle (underneath the trim and carpet). We tried to keep signal and power cables as separated as possible. We removed the trim at the base of the front driver door, middle trim behind the front seatbelt, and popped the trim by the rear driver door up high enough to snake the wires to the trunk.


Next we removed the middle carpet piece in the trunk (one rivet centered behind the backseats):
View attachment 5868

We also pulled some rivets on the left carpet (shown in above image) to access that metal channel you see running along the backseats. We snaked our wires through that channel and pulled them out of one of the through holes.

Here is the finished product:


View attachment 5869



Important Oddities:

Sometimes after reattaching the 24 pinout and turning the car on, the head unit goes into lockout mode. All you have to do is start the car and hold the head unit power button. Also, all the warning indicators on the dash go on (TCS system, low pressure warning) and the dash says something like 'system calibrating, continue driving'. After installing everything, we drove about a mile and the dash reset to normal (all warning lights turned off). It seems certain counters are reset (my MPG rating reset to zero but everything seems completely normal.
What fuse did you tap into for your amp
 
View attachment 9484
I don’t have that under my steering wheel
You are looking at the main internal fuses. The reserved space for the 7.5A fuse is in the "sub" fuse box below the main internal. It will not have a fuse in it. If you look at the diagram on the underside of the steering column it shows the reserved fuse is "B" labeled "Audio SUB VST".
 
What? Power wire is 8 gauge which is plenty for this sub.
Yeah, assuming it's actually a true 8 gauge wire and not one of the many 10-12 awg wires with very thick casing in those junk "Amplifier Power Kits" you'd get at most places.

Yeah, if I had the Bose system I wouldn’t have done this. The sport doesn’t have a sub and the door speakers are super flat so a sub helps quite a bit.
Super flat is actually what you want. That is a description of frequency response. Lacking quality or output is different.

How many amperage your pulling from the alt is the main factor. Which is why most of the time people experience headlight dimming. When that happens you have to upgrade your electrical like big 3 upgrade.
Not exactly. When you have adequate reserves through batteries and/or capacitance you can be just fine. BUT on a daily driver a high output alternator is definitely ideal for 'high' power car audio systems.
that looks like some awesome work there. It seems well thought out.
The T-taps used are about the worst thing you can do in an install of any sort involving wiring. No professional or person with experience will use them for many good reasons. I would change them if I were O.P.
The subwoofer has a root mean squared (RMS) (this is just the average power draw over time) power rating and will pull enough amps to support itself.
No, the subwoofer doesn't "pull enough amps to support itself". The AMPLIFIER sends power to the SUBWOOFER and the amplifier does the 'pulling' of the amps. The subwoofer can't just draw whatever power it feels like, it can only TAKE what the amplifier can output.
Sorry bud. But his 8 gauge is quite sufficient in HIS install with HIS equipment. Go to Facebook and join, “I just wanna bang” car audio group if you wanna ramble on about your skewed theories. Ya only need wire big enough for the amperage required by the amp and the length of the run. Which in this case is low. For being a <20 ft run and probably only needing 25 amps at 13.8v to make 300+ watts, 8 gauge is more than enough. It’s way more simple than you think kiddo.
Just looking at the wire and fuse holder I don't trust that the wire used is actual 8 gauge. It could be but I can't determine if it is or not. However, I think people should run bigger power cable than 8 gauge in all scenarios. A nicer, but still fairly simple and basic system would involve a 5- channel amp. I may run a couple of runs of 2/0awg to a lithium in the back or under the vehicle to feed my Digital Designs amplifiers if I don't look into a nice 5 channel.
Thanks for the wiring information! I would recommend the splice and tape over t-taps though!
I agree 100%. T taps are the worst possible connection you can do. What some of us will do is skin the insulation of wires with a razor blade to expose the strands and weave wires in and tesa tape them or weave wires in, solder and then tesa tape them. This method is used to integrate many aftermarket security systems without hacking up the wiring. In my opinion it is the best way to do it, looks clean, professional AND best of all, FACTORY.
I ran them up the passenger side. You want the positive cable and the RCA/remote wire separate as of they are together it can cause distortion. At least that's what I've always read. Use a coat hanger or stiff metal wire and make it up there. I put electrical tape on the ends so I wouldn't scratch stuff.
It's good practice to run power wires on one side and SIGNAL cables on another. That's what we should all do in a perfect world but sometimes it's not always possible.
Are you asking for the remote wire? I hope you're not trying to grab power from an already fused source from the car
A remote wire will probably only draw .5 amps so it's not likely to cause any issues BUT it's definitely better to add a dedicated circuit that gets power from a fused source that is live when the ignition is on. When I was a kid I would run two 16 gauge wires from the power input of the amp into the cabin near the driver's seat and wire them to a switch. When we would blast music and see the cops we could quickly shut down the amp(s) since hitting a tiny mute button was a pain in the butt if the head unit even had one.
 
A remote wire will probably only draw .5 amps so it's not likely to cause any issues BUT it's definitely better to add a dedicated circuit that gets power from a fused source that is live when the ignition is on. When I was a kid I would run two 16 gauge wires from the power input of the amp into the cabin near the driver's seat and wire them to a switch. When we would blast music and see the cops we could quickly shut down the amp(s) since hitting a tiny mute button was a pain in the butt if the head unit even had one.
I think you truly missed the point. I asked if he was asking for the remote wire..OR the lead power......his question sounded like he was trying to pull lead power from an already fused source...he wasn't asking for the remote wire. Yes you could pull a remote wire from an already fused source but that wasn't his question.
 
I ran the hi,lo converter from the drivers side door speaker since I replaced all the speakers with infinity reference speakers... The amp was installed in the trunk. Ran into an issue where the stereo in my 2022 civic sport would sporadically not play... I took it to my buddy to see what the heck I did and found out that the speaker wire on one of the speakers was loose.. If you install speakers it would be best to solder all the connections and not use butt connections like i did unless you have a really good crimper. Now I have no issues... Just in case anyone else runs into the same problems..
 
Well I followed all the steps in this article and successfully installed in my 2022 civic sport.

- hardest part was the running of the wires from the head unit to through the dash. This was by far my least liked part of this install.

- car is all clips and running the power/RCA's was we easy.

- used LOC, mounted under dash. Used minifuse tap to get power to LOC

- mounted amp to back seat.

- used 8 inch kicker square sub, which does the trick. Enough bass in the cabin with out being ridiculously loud. Came out of a 09 F350 Harley edition.

- added bass control knob.

-
Image

Image

Image


- every civic sport could use this update to the sound as it lacked bass from day one.


- thanks to all the contributors as it made the process super easy to follow
 
The post has been super informative
I have a leased 2022 sport and wanting to install a subwoofer as well, mine is a lease
So was just wondering if tapping the wires like you did would void the warranty or it is fine by the manufacturer if we do it this way?
Also if anyone has experience with upgrading leased vehicle, i would really appreciate if you can share as to what are the limits to upgrade without voiding the lease and the warranty
 
You need 6 wires minimum.
4 for the sound output,which can come from the rears as it'll be easier to tap into the harness from the b pillars/floor board area.
The power cable,the ground. Now as far as the remote,you can either get an amp that has its own on feature without requiring a remote wire.
Or you can use something like an LOC-T that has the remote wire output and you just feed it B+ and negative. I'm not a big fan of grabbing an accessory wire from the car because it can be a battery drain issue on these newer cars. You only want the amp on when the radio is on. So taping for the signal when the stereo is on is the safer function to help avoid battery drain.

This just comes down to how much you want to spend on adding a subwoofer.
 
A buddy and I installed a Rockford Fosgate p300-12T subwoofer in my 2022 civic sport today --- I haven't found any info on installing a sub in a 22 civic, so I thought I would document the process here. We are not experts so use this guide at your own risk :) That said, the install turned out very clean and is completely reversible barring a small hole through a rubber grommet in the firewall.

Signal wires:

My sub has a built in amp that can tap Hi level inputs. I wanted to tap the front door speakers since those seem to provide the most bass (I could be wrong on this as I only used my ear as a reference). To find these wires, we popped the panel behind the head unit. It pops right off with a plastic trim lever. There is a wiring harness attached to some sensor? on the trim panel that we disconnected so we could fully remove the panel.

View attachment 5861
After removing the panel, here is a photo looking down at the backside of the head unit. The bottom wiring harness plugged into the head (the bottom wiring harness in this image) is a 24 pinout connector. The connector seems to have the same pinout as the 2020 civic connector shown here.
View attachment 5862


I used 16 gauge speaker wire to tap pins A15-A18 (front left and right speakers). Here is a photo of the tapped 24 pin connector.
View attachment 5863


After tapping this connector, we routed the speaker wire into the left side of the dash, over the top of steering column, and down towards the left side trim. It helps to tape a thin piece of wire to the beginning of speaker wires so you can fish them through the dash easier. Bend the tip of the wire so you don't scratch stuff.



These picture somewhat show how we routed the wires. (Note the red wire in these pictures is power from battery which I haven't talked about yet.)
View attachment 5864

View attachment 5865

We popped the piece of trim near at the front of the driver door to route the cables behind it.
View attachment 5866
I couldn't get a picture of the wires routed above the steering column. Sort of have to feel your way through with the fishing wire.

Power Wires
We took out the battery and battery holder to access a rubber grommet that feeds some cables through the firewall. We punched a hole through the bottom of the grommet as to not hit any of the wires:
There are other grommets you could use (e.g. hood release grommet), but this one gave us the most options for discretely routing the power cable through the engine bay.
View attachment 5870

We attached the inline fuse to the battery holder using a zip tie as shown here:
View attachment 5871
Note: We did this part as the very last step --- the battery should be unplugged during the install.

We attached the ground wire to a bolt attaching the backseats to the chassis.

Routing to Trunk


This is basically the same as 10th gen civics (see youtube videos).

We routed signal and power cables to the trunk down the left side of the vehicle (underneath the trim and carpet). We tried to keep signal and power cables as separated as possible. We removed the trim at the base of the front driver door, middle trim behind the front seatbelt, and popped the trim by the rear driver door up high enough to snake the wires to the trunk.


Next we removed the middle carpet piece in the trunk (one rivet centered behind the backseats):
View attachment 5868

We also pulled some rivets on the left carpet (shown in above image) to access that metal channel you see running along the backseats. We snaked our wires through that channel and pulled them out of one of the through holes.

Here is the finished product:


View attachment 5869



Important Oddities:

Sometimes after reattaching the 24 pinout and turning the car on, the head unit goes into lockout mode. All you have to do is start the car and hold the head unit power button. Also, all the warning indicators on the dash go on (TCS system, low pressure warning) and the dash says something like 'system calibrating, continue driving'. After installing everything, we drove about a mile and the dash reset to normal (all warning lights turned off). It seems certain counters are reset (my MPG rating reset to zero but everything seems completely normal.
NOICE!!! But what did you connect the remote wire to?
 
What exactly did you use to tap the signal wires?

I'm working through my first install of subs (thank you for your walk-through!) of a Kicker 10” sub.

Do I need to tap the left amp signal wire into both driver door signal wires? Or just one?

Signal wires:

My sub has a built in amp that can tap Hi level inputs. I wanted to tap the front door speakers since those seem to provide the most bass (I could be wrong on this as I only used my ear as a reference). To find these wires, we popped the panel behind the head unit. It pops right off with a plastic trim lever. There is a wiring harness attached to some sensor? on the trim panel that we disconnected so we could fully remove the panel.

View attachment 5861
After removing the panel, here is a photo looking down at the backside of the head unit. The bottom wiring harness plugged into the head (the bottom wiring harness in this image) is a 24 pinout connector. The connector seems to have the same pinout as the 2020 civic connector shown here.
View attachment 5862


I used 16 gauge speaker wire to tap pins A15-A18 (front left and right speakers). Here is a photo of the tapped 24 pin connector.
View attachment 5863
 
61 - 80 of 107 Posts