Start with channels. A 2-channel amp powers a pair of speakers or can often be “bridged” to run a single sub. A 4-channel amp usually runs front and rear speakers; many people bridge the rear channels for a small sub while keeping the front active. A 5-channel or “system” amp bundles four speaker channels plus one dedicated sub channel—clean and compact. If you’re strictly doing a subwoofer, look for a mono (single-channel) amp designed for low-impedance loads.
Good pairing beats raw power. For door speakers, match RMS-to-RMS: if your speakers are rated for 60 watts RMS, an amp that delivers around 50–75 watts RMS per channel is a sweet spot. You don’t need to hit the number perfectly; aim for clean power with a little headroom. Pay attention to speaker sensitivity too—a higher sensitivity speaker gets louder with less power, handy if you’re building a mild system.
Exhaust tech keeps evolving because engines and regulations keep pushing it forward. Modern systems warm up faster, monitor themselves more closely, and combine multiple catalysts and filters into compact units. Gasoline particulate filters are becoming common as direct-injection engines strive for cleaner exhaust. Diesels rely on well-tuned aftertreatment to keep soot and nitrogen oxides in check. Meanwhile, hybrids reduce engine run time, and fully electric vehicles sidestep tailpipe exhaust altogether, shifting the emissions conversation upstream to power generation.
Morning starts with a scan: what’s arriving, what’s leaving, what’s blocking what. A car jockey reads a lot like a map—paper checklists are common, but so is a tablet with color‑coded lanes and ETAs. The first round is often a cleanup of yesterday’s rush: move the late drop‑offs to service staging, retrieve completed vehicles, and prep priority rows. Then come bursts—delivery trucks show up unannounced, a sales team calls for a test drive, a family arrives early for a pickup. Each request gets threaded into the dance without breaking the rhythm.
You do not need a toolbox the size of a sofa. You do need a routine. Tires first: they set the mood for everything. Keep pressures on target and rotate on schedule to extend life and sharpen handling. Listen for brake squeals and feel for pulsing; catching issues early means cheaper fixes. Engine oil or service intervals still matter, but so do cabin and engine air filters, wiper blades, and coolant. For EVs, the battery pack is hands-off, but brakes, tires, and cabin filters still need love.