Clarion Caa-355 Now
You learned its personality. The bass boost knob (optional, wired remote) was a lie—it only added muddy 45Hz. You left it at zero. The "high voltage" preamp input accepted anything from a 2V head unit to a 4V line driver without clipping. It was tolerant, like a patient teacher. By 1999, you sold the Civic to a kid down the street. You left the CAA-355 installed—bolted under the seat, wired into the harness. You told him, "Take care of it. That amp will outlive the car."
The first kick drum hit.
He laughed.
You’d saved $249.99—every sponge-bucket shift worth it. clarion caa-355
For a generation of budget-conscious installers in the late '90s, the CAA-355 wasn't just a component. It was the first time you heard your music the way the engineer intended—clear, controlled, and with just enough bass to make your soul vibrate. You learned its personality
Two years later, the Civic's engine threw a rod. The kid scrapped the shell but pulled the amp. Last you heard, it was powering a garage system—a pair of old bookshelf speakers and a 10" sub in a homemade box, running off a computer power supply. The Clarion CAA-355 was never the loudest amp. It never won a dB drag race. It never had the esoteric pedigree of an old school PPI Art Series or a Soundstream Reference. The "high voltage" preamp input accepted anything from
Your friend Mark in the passenger seat just said, "Whoa."