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now with those 2 subs it calls for 1000w rms but i dont think you will get better than this for 300 dollars. But i think you might be able to find it cheaper some where else
That will work out just fine! Because that amplifier is 1 Ohm stable, you will be able to wire those subs up in parrallel. Doing so will effetively run the subs together with 1Ohm of resistance, and you should be able to get around 1100watts out of that amp and you wont have to turn the gain up quite all the way, which will prolong the life of your subs, and amp.
If you need any help when it comes to setting those up, let me know. I'll be glad to walk you through it!
Representin' Team Red In The North
Red '96 Pontiac Firebird "Smokeshow" 3800, M5, Far From Stock!!
Ohm's are just A unit of measurement for resistance. Most subs that are affordable and not way $$$ are four ohm or cheapies 8 ohm. Think of ohm's like this.. If you have A small creek and in that creek you have two big blocks.. well what happens if you add two more? Less water flow right?.. Well in our case the water is amperage and the blocks are the resistance. The less resistance the more power you can get out of your system. Most people wire there subs in parallel to get more power out of it but if you run your wireing in series you effectivly double the resistance! And that reduces the amps put to your sub from the amp itself.Thats not what most want to do, so say you have two four ohm subs and want to hook them up. well if you do it in parallel then they would reduce to just two ohm's of resistance. Wire them in series and now they are 8 ohm!<<< Wrong way to do it for power! Or you can simply not bridge your amp and wire each individually and they will remain 4 ohm.. Do it like this if you have A very powerful amp and don't want to blow up your subs. In most cases you wan't to make sure that your amp is two ohm stable if it's not then running it in two ohm mode will kill it's life or might just fry it alltogather. Example two four ohm's in parallel would fry an amp thats not two ohm stable! But if you run them in series you would get 8 ohm's and the amp would perform below it's peak! Hope this helps and feel free to offer any advice everyone. I'm half a sleep now as I work third shift so I might have made A mistake or left somthing out. Good luck!
Ok so please correct me if I'm wrong because i probably am! lol,
When I get them delivered, I'll wire the positives from BOTH subs together then into the positive on the amp and do the same for the negatives? Will this work or no?
Ok so please correct me if I'm wrong because i probably am! lol,
When I get them delivered, I'll wire the positives from BOTH subs together then into the positive on the amp and do the same for the negatives? Will this work or no?
Bingo
Representin' Team Red In The North
Red '96 Pontiac Firebird "Smokeshow" 3800, M5, Far From Stock!!
Most subs that are affordable and not way $$$ are four ohm or cheapies 8 ohm.
The price of the subwoofer has nothing to do with impedence. The same brand 2 ohm subwoofer is not going to be more expensive than the 4 ohm version. But underneath that huge run-on paragraph, there is a small amount of truth. Way too confusing for a new guy though.
First off, the Alpine Type-R has dual voice coils. I'm not sure if that's understood by everyone on this thread. So, Injected, you will need to use a series/parallel wiring scheme. This will give you a final load of 2 ohms to the amplifier. This is really your only reasonable choice. Visit www.jlaudio.com or www.rockfordfosgate.com I believe. They both have some easy to use wiring diagrams to help you. Remember, you have TWO DUAL 2 ohm subwoofers.
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