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Richie

posted on 11th May 03 at 17:10

you can daisy chain the 2 amps, as long as they have a thru put or line out on one of the amps.

If not you can use RCA splitters. Usually the head units that have a sub out just give you the power to adjust the level and frequencies of the sub from the headunit.


M4tt

posted on 11th May 03 at 11:32

ah cheers m8, i get it now.

you know some head units have a RCA dedicated to the sub, how would you go about wiring two amps for the sub into this?

would you just split the rca output, or daisy chain the amps (if thats possible)?

tA

[Edited on 11-05-2003 by M4tt]


Richie

posted on 11th May 03 at 00:53

or, if you cant afford an amp that matches the power rating of the speaker when wired in parallell, you can use 2 amps.

Say the speaker is 1000RMS for example, and has two 4 ohm voice coils. You cant afford an amplifier that gives out 1000RMS at 2 ohms, but you can afford 2 amps that give 500 RMS at 4 ohms each (this is just a scenario ppl so dont slaughter me ;) ), then you could wire two amps to the same speaker. You would connect each amp to one of the voice coils.

Can be the same again for the two 2 ohm coils. Say the speaker is 1200RMS. Once again you cant find or afford (scenario again) an amplifier that gives out this power at 1 ohm, but you can get two amps that deliver 600RMS each at 2 ohms, you get what im saying???

:D


Richie

posted on 11th May 03 at 00:48

ARRRGH :mad: hehe!

2x4 ohms or 2x 2ohms mean they have dual voice coils. If it has two 4 ohm coils, then you can wire these in parallel to give you a 2ohm load, and with a 2 ohm stable amp, will give you a much higher output than you would have had at 4 ohms.

If it has two 2 ohm voice coils, you can wire these in parallel to give you a 1 ohm load, which will once again give you a higher output from your amplifier if it is 1 ohm stable. Alternativly you can wire the two 2 ohm voice coils in series to give you 4 ohms, but that would be pointless really :)

to give you an idea of an amps ratings, ill demonstrate the vibe VP4.

at 4 ohms = 450WRMS
at 2 ohms = 750WRMS
at 1 ohm = 1200RMS

hope that makes it clearer not worse for you ;)


M4tt

posted on 11th May 03 at 00:04

i was looking at some rocky fossy subs and they say they have an impedence of 2x 4ohms or 2x 2ohms.

what does that mean? what kind of amp do you need, 2 amps or sumin?