Plymouth Voyager Speaker Size
Speaker size, type, and location chart for Plymouth Voyager models from 1984 to 2000 production years.
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Dashboard Speaker
| Years | Type | Size (inch) |
|---|---|---|
| 1984 - 2000 | Full-Range | 5.25 |
Front Door Panel Speaker
| Years | Type | Size (inch) |
|---|---|---|
| 1996 - 2000 | Full-Range | 6x9 |
Rear Door Panel Speaker
| Years | Type | Size (inch) |
|---|---|---|
| 1996 - 2000 | Full-Range | 6x9 |
Rear Speaker
| Years | Type | Size (inch) |
|---|---|---|
| 1984 - 1995 | Full-Range | 6x9 |
Plymouth Voyager Speaker FAQ
What speakers should I replace first in my Plymouth Voyager for the biggest sound improvement?
Replace the front door panel 6 x 9 speakers first. These handle most of your music's midrange and vocal frequencies - around 80Hz to 4kHz typically. Front speakers create the soundstage you actually hear while driving. The Plymouth Voyager's front door placement gives decent positioning for stereo imaging. Dashboard 5.25 inch speakers might seem important but they're often fighting road noise and awkward angles. Rear speakers? They mostly fill in background sound.
Can I install component speakers in all Plymouth Voyager locations?
Dashboard and door panel locations accept components, but the rear location depends on your specific setup. Component speakers separate tweeters from woofers - tweeters need mounting space and proper angling. Plymouth Voyager dashboards usually have enough depth for 5.25 inch component woofers, maybe 2-3 inches clearance. Door panels should fit 6 x 9 components if you can route tweeter wires properly. Check your door panel thickness first. Some aftermarket component sets include surface-mount tweeters that stick anywhere.
What's the difference between coaxial and full-range speakers for Plymouth Voyager installation?
Coaxial speakers have built-in tweeters mounted on the woofer cone. Full-range speakers try to reproduce all frequencies with just the main cone - no separate tweeter. For Plymouth Voyager applications, coaxials usually sound better because that built-in tweeter handles frequencies above 3kHz more clearly. Full-range 6 x 9 speakers might work in rear locations where you want background fill rather than detailed highs. Most people can't tell the difference in rear seats anyway. Dashboard 5.25 inch coaxials often outperform full-range because of the tweeter's directional control.
Do 6 x 9 speakers in Plymouth Voyager doors need special power handling?
Factory head units typically output 15-25 watts RMS per channel. Most aftermarket 6 x 9 speakers handle 50-100 watts RMS easily, so power shouldn't be your main concern. Focus on sensitivity ratings instead - look for 88dB or higher. Plymouth Voyager door panels create some acoustic loading that can help bass response, but don't expect miracles from door-mounted speakers. The 6 x 9 size gives you decent surface area for midrange punch. If you're adding an amplifier later, get speakers rated for at least 75 watts RMS to handle the extra power cleanly.
Why does my Plymouth Voyager have both dashboard and door speakers?
Dashboard 5.25 inch speakers typically handle higher frequencies and vocal clarity. Door panel 6 x 9 speakers provide midrange body and some bass foundation. This creates a wider soundstage - highs from dashboard level, mids from door level. Think of it as a basic two-way system spread across different mounting points. Some Plymouth Voyager models might have had basic crossover networks to split frequencies properly. Without factory crossovers, both locations probably get full-range signals, which can cause frequency overlap and muddiness around 1-3kHz.