MXINXS
10+ year member
Junior Member
Last weekend I installed my first amp to power 2 10's in my dodge ram quad cab. The amp is a RF P3002 and the subs are JL 10W3v2-D6's. My head unit is the alpine CDA-9855. I installed it all pretty much by myself, relying on the internet pretty heavily, probably why I have a problem. Anyways. I ran the power cable to the battery, 4 gauge, the ground to a seat bolt next to the amp, 4 gauge, and the turn on wire and RCA's from the amp to the head unit. Thus the amp should be ok, that seems simple enough. Each sub is in a box with .7 sq ft of air space. The subs are dual 6 ohm, and if I'm right, getting the ohms lower increases power output from the amp. I wired each sub seperately, wiring the positive and negative on each voice coil to the other, then running wires from one voice coil to the amp, in parallel, for what should be a 3 ohm load at the amp from both subs I believe.
Now the problem. The amp turns on and seems to get only a small amount of power to the subs. They sound like a decent pair of 6 1/2s or a weak set of 6x9s. Nothing more. For me, there are 2 possibilities: First, the amplifier isn't getting enough power to the subs to make them perform at their full potential, or second, I need a box with more airspace. Am I completely missing some simple wiring mistake? Or am I on the right track? If I am, how the hell can I tell if its the amp or the box ..
Now the problem. The amp turns on and seems to get only a small amount of power to the subs. They sound like a decent pair of 6 1/2s or a weak set of 6x9s. Nothing more. For me, there are 2 possibilities: First, the amplifier isn't getting enough power to the subs to make them perform at their full potential, or second, I need a box with more airspace. Am I completely missing some simple wiring mistake? Or am I on the right track? If I am, how the hell can I tell if its the amp or the box ..
