My complaint, if any, would be to ditch the para dynamics low pass filter, and put a nice drake filter in line, or if you can find a bencher low pass. Those para dynamics things are built so poorly, I would have for something in it to go bad, and before you know it, you kill your amplifier because of a short, or loose solder joint. Worst case scenario, try this: LOW PASS FILTER
And that would still be 100 times better than what you are doing now.
That, plus some good Belden RG-8X or LMR240 for your jumpers, and good Amphenol connectors at the least, and some LMR240 going to your antenna. It will all handle the power output without loss in heat, although in mobile lead lengths of a few feet, loss is negligible, but just knowing it will handle the power and you have good connections keeps peace of mind that everything is "right".
It didn't match your antenna any better, it just attenuated the reflect back to the meter making it appear to have lowered your swr. That's my guess having never used one.In an attempt to cure this I installed this filter. Which didn't do anything, but for some reason it lowers my swr a bit, so why not.?
Thanks, yeah I have been trying different jumpers. Truck is grounded and bonded in a bunch of places. I did get the SWR from over 2.1.1 to 1.1.1 when I got the 10k antenna, so I did my work there. This amp is is making me look for new ideas.
Nice neat install but you have broken Rule #1 which is a cardinal DO NOT DO
Never ever wire directly to the battery negative terminal. It is a seriously bad idea. Apart from ground loops, if for some reason there's a fault with the main battery ground to body strap such as it breaking, becoming loose or the connection at the body becoming corroded and high resistance, because your radio gear is electrically connected to the body through the antenna and any brackets screwed to the vehicle through metal, absolutely everything that uses the body of the vehicle as a ground connection will have the full current of that device flowing through your radio as a path back to 0V. That includes things like lights, the engine management system, the starter motor. You could end up with hundreds of amps flowing through your radio and amp.
You want to connect the ground wires for the radio and amp to the car body near where the thick ground strap from the battery connects to the body.
More here.
Grounding Negative System
With that out of the way you'll benefit massively from doing some bonding of the hood across the hinge from the hood to the body and do the same for the tailgate as well, especially if you've got the antenna mounted there. You should find that when you've done it you'll need to shorten the antenna as the resonant point will have dropped. That is good because it means you're making the RF path over the body of the vehicle, and therefore the ground plane, more efficient which means better signal radiated and received.