mamey69 10+ year member
Quiero Cerveza!!
as title says what the difference between mono and stereo... I saw that spec in an A/B class mono amp... so I thougth its the same ****.. it is???
There are a couple reasons:why would u want to bridge a 2 channel amp ? if you got the channels use em i say //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif BAH
Using that logic, why would you want to bridge an amp period? You're still using the channels when you bridge....why would u want to bridge a 2 channel amp ? if you got the channels use em i say //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif BAH
Here's an easy idea for ya.Assuming the use of 2 subs, which one would be better? Stereo vs. mono, yada yada yada. All too confusing for me.
1. 500x2 at 2ohms
2. 750x1 at 4ohms
Wouldn't it be better to get 500 each instead of 375 each? But there's the whole 2ohm/4ohm factor that is beyond me.
Why would you want to send 2 different signals to 2 different subs.?? Makes no sense. Its sort of like in home theater, you use one sub to handle all the low frequencies, not 2 seperate ones.why would u want to bridge a 2 channel amp ? if you got the channels use em i say //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif BAH
people usually set each channel to the same setting *if available* usually it sends the same to each channel. it just matters how your stereos VCs add up. if you have 2 SVC subs and want to hook them up to a 2 channel amp you would only get a 4 ohm load per sub, if you bridge them not only does it combine the subs and split it to 2 homs ..... it splits again to 1ohm when you use both channels together on them.Why would you want to send 2 different signals to 2 different subs.?? Makes no sense. Its sort of like in home theater, you use one sub to handle all the low frequencies, not 2 seperate ones.
Adam
//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/rolleyes.gif.c1fef805e9d1464d377451cd5bc18bfb.gif//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/rolleyes.gif.c1fef805e9d1464d377451cd5bc18bfb.gif blah, blah, blah,.........thats not what I meant man.people usually set each channel to the same setting *if available* usually it sends the same to each channel. it just matters how your stereos VCs add up. if you have 2 SVC subs and want to hook them up to a 2 channel amp you would only get a 4 ohm load per sub, if you bridge them not only does it combine the subs and split it to 2 homs ..... it splits again to 1ohm when you use both channels together on them.
if you had a mono amp ... it would only split the difference once b/c the speakers would gather the power from 2 dif channels at once ...... you basically buy your amp around what kinda subs you get
thanks for the input guys but this amp only has one channel!! so how can it be mono and stereo at the same time its sayas stable to 4ohm stereo and 2ohm mono... its just one channel so why is stereo and mono at the same time??????????as title says what the difference between mono and stereo... I saw that spec in an A/B class mono amp... so I thougth its the same ****.. it is???