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are 2000 watts too much for 3 type r12s
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<blockquote data-quote="304290" data-source="post: 1884179" data-attributes="member: 566696"><p>anybody who knows a little about car audio knows that no ohm load is constant. i think he assumed that i was using four ohm speakers because that would be close to 1.2 ohms he suggested . he said my amp will never see .66 ohms which is not true. if i connected enough speakers, it will see .66 and below. ohms loads just don't rise. they go up and down as well. i have an extech digital multimeter. so i've seen it for myself. the question i asked don't have anything to do with ohm loads anyway.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="304290, post: 1884179, member: 566696"] anybody who knows a little about car audio knows that no ohm load is constant. i think he assumed that i was using four ohm speakers because that would be close to 1.2 ohms he suggested . he said my amp will never see .66 ohms which is not true. if i connected enough speakers, it will see .66 and below. ohms loads just don't rise. they go up and down as well. i have an extech digital multimeter. so i've seen it for myself. the question i asked don't have anything to do with ohm loads anyway. [/QUOTE]
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are 2000 watts too much for 3 type r12s
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