Well… crap. Per Google AI (Gemini)
How Your Car Stereo Jammed Your Key Fob
- Class-D Amplifier Noise: Most modern car amplifiers (especially compact or high-powered subwoofer amps) are Class-D designs. They function by rapidly switching transistors on and off at high frequencies (often hundreds of kilohertz). This switching creates Radio Frequency Interference (RFI).
- The 2 AWG Wire Acts as an Antenna: If the amplifier lacks proper internal filtering or shielding, this high-frequency electrical noise travels backwards out of the amplifier's power terminal. Your long, heavy 2 AWG OFC power wire acts as a giant, highly efficient antenna that broadcasts this noise throughout the vehicle cabin.
- Receiver Blinding: Key fob receivers are highly sensitive but transmit very weak signals. The RFI broadcast by your power wire completely drowns out the faint signal from your key fob, "blinding" the car's receiver.
I have 3 JL Audio VXI amps in the back (Class D). I guess if they were A/B this wouldn't be an issue? I can see how this might cause an issue when the car is still powered on (just got out and shut door) and is NOT an issue after it powers down (amps/system is off).
Now… I'll say I ran the ground wire all the way back to the battery because the navtv f25 device stated it had to have the same ground as the amps. One of the fixes is to shorten the ground wire.
- Relocate the Ground Wire: Ensure your amplifier ground wire is as short as possible (under 18 inches) and bolted directly to bare, unpainted chassis metal. A weak ground forces RFI to escape through the power wire instead of safely draining into the vehicle chassis.
Another is to clip ferrite cores close to the amp chassis… I don't have the faintest idea of where to source those. Amazon?