The volume seems to drop-out occassionally while listening to the radio.
This does not happen to me. When a signal gets weak, I can tell it's happening before I lose the signal. It's not a question of a tradeoff between clean signal and silence. If you are hearing a reasonably clean station and it suddenly drops out, it's probably not because it's trying to mask static. I'd say there's something else wrong, like a wiring problem, or maybe you don't have any power applied to your car's built-in antenna booster or something like that.
The 'RDS' indicator has come on several times, eventhough there's no RDS being broadcast in my area.
Probably harmless. Occasionally grabbing onto some random noise and briefly mis-interpreting the signal as RDS. Probably normal, and probably doesn't hurt anything.
Then again, it might be related to your previous problem, I don't know...
Installing the tuner seems to have introduced dreaded alternator whine. Are there any common things to check for?
I had the exact same thing happen. I thought I'd finally licked all my noise problems, then the tuner installation brought it back.
I worked very hard for a while and finally nailed the problem. I did a whole bunch of different things and the combination of stuff I did finally cleared it up. Here's what I came up with:
- Each "component" that you add to a car stereo increases the chance for ground loops. Because each component is another path to ground. Every amp, crossover, head unit, etc., is just another way for a ground loop to rear its ugly head.
- So therefore, diagnose your problem by pulling components until the problem goes away. Then try routes around the problem.
- In the process of working on it, I found a cold/loose solder joint at one of my power wiring junctions. Fixing this helped.
- Re-routing the audio RCA cables so that they no longer ran next to the power wires helped.
- Re-dressing the audio RCA cables behind the sled helped.
- Re-patching the amplifiers helped. Originally, I had it wired like this:
Front output->Front channels of 4-channel amp.
Rear output->Rear channels of 4-channel amp.
Rear channel pass-through->Subwoofer amp.
When I re-routed it so that it went like this:
Front output->Front channels of 4-channel amp.
Front channel pass-through->Rear channels of 4-channel amp
Rear output->Subwoofer amp.
Then the last of my noise went away.
The re-wiring for the front/rear channels means that I no longer have a front/rear balance control, but that's OK as I had the balance perfectly set already by using the amps' input gains and the empeg was always set to "center". So by re-wiring it the way I just listed, I now use the fader as a subwoofer level control.
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Tony Fabris