4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
i'm looking at getting the mb quart onx4.80 amplifier (puts out 80 watts rms x 4 channels at 4 ohms). i'm also looking at the alpine type r components (spr 50c) for my doors, which put out 100 watts rms at 4 ohms each speaker. i'm also looking at the infinity reference 1260w subwoofer which does 300 watts rms at 4 ohms.
the amplifier puts out 320 watts rms x 2 channels at 4 ohms when bridged. i know i can simply use 2 of the amp's channels and power the 2 alpine speakers with those 2 channels, therefore giving each of the speakers 80 watts each. and i know i can bridge the other two channels into 1 channel and power my sub that way.
my question is instead of just powering the 2 alpine components with 2 seperate channels at 80 watts rms each, could i put both of those speakers on ONE BRIDGED CHANNEL.? again, the amp puts out 320 watts rms x 2 channels when bridged. i would like the sub to get one of those channels, and the two speakers to get the other channel. if i can do this, does that mean my 2 speakers would get 160 watts rms each, and my sub would get 320 watts rms?
(i'm not getting rear speakers and i know i may have to adjust the gain on the amp)
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Bridge the 2 speakers on 2 channels..and the sub for the other 2 channels. you should do fine
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Quote:
Originally Posted by
rovertnamrod
my question is instead of just powering the 2 alpine components with 2 seperate channels at 80 watts rms each, could i put both of those speakers on ONE BRIDGED CHANNEL.? again, the amp puts out 320 watts rms x 2 channels when bridged. i would like the sub to get one of those channels, and the two speakers to get the other channel. if i can do this, does that mean my 2 speakers would get 160 watts rms each, and my sub would get 320 watts rms?
(i'm not getting rear speakers and i know i may have to adjust the gain on the amp)
No. First off, running 2 speakers off the same amp channel will create a 2 ohm load (two 4 ohm speakers), and your amp won't handle that in bridged mode. Secondly, you'd lose stereo - both speakers would play the same combined L&R program. And lastly, the speakers are rated at 100 watts max, why would you want to power them at 160 each?
Stick to the original plan. 80W each is perfect for those speakers.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Quote:
Originally Posted by
WinC101
Bridge the 2 speakers on 2 channels..and the sub for the other 2 channels. you should do fine
if you do you will not have stereo, only mono on your fronts and no balance controls.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Yup.. Mono and it gets louder than if you wire them each in one channel.. I love em loud! Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kingstroker
if you do you will not have stereo, only mono on your fronts and no balance controls.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Quote:
Originally Posted by
WinC101
Yup.. Mono and it gets louder than if you wire them each in one channel.. I love em loud!
:banghead:
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
160 each just for "headroom." i would not actually give the speakers that much power as i would adjust the gain on the amp. but with only 80 watts, my speakers wouldn't live up to their full potential.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
ok so if i give each door speaker 80 watts while my sub is pushing 300 watts, is my sub going to drown out the music with too much bass? i am just looking for a high sound quality, balanced setup- not extreme loudness.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
Too many variables to predict which will be louder, but you can balance it out by adjusting the sub gain if you have to. Believe me, 80 watts per speaker can be rather loud.
Re: 4 channel amp, 2 door speakers and 1 sub
agreed with Mylar. subs are less efficient, and our hearing is less sensitive so we need more power to subs than speakers to result in the same "loudness".
maintain a stereo signal to the fronts and bridge the sub - that is a tried and true method.