MAkahveli 10+ year member
Member
I felt I needed to ask, these subs really narrow down amp choices a lot. Are there people really or seriously using 8ohm amps?
better question is. Why would any hardcore basshead want to use a single voice coil sub nowadays.I felt I needed to ask, these subs really narrow down amp choices a lot. Are there people really or seriously using 8ohm amps?
Ease of wiringbetter question is. Why would any hardcore basshead want to use a single voice coil sub nowadays.
There are a lot of mono amps that will only run 2 ohm mono...so the Dual 4 subs would work best for those amps in getting the maximum powerI felt I needed to ask, these subs really narrow down amp choices a lot. Are there people really or seriously using 8ohm amps?
I'm gonna have to look into these wiring configurations I didn't see much that intrigued me on Google search.....I know I know.....When pairing them with a 2nd you're final load is 1ohm. So if you're doing multiple subs, it gives you more options on what load you're amp will see!
or a Single 2 ohm DVC subwoofer wired to 1 ohm on a monoblock. A lot of power at 1 ohm is a lot cheaper then power at 2 ohms and 4 ohms.I'll look into this too!
You have to use both voice coils on the sub. Search series speaker wiring and parallel speaker wiring. Theres a bunch of diagrams to show you rather than try to explain it all here.So if I had an amp that put out the desired rms wattage at 4 ohms and only use one output (as if I didn't hook up one of the terminals) would this still be best for the sub rather than try all the different configurations? Would anything be wasted not using the other voice coil terminal?
Because the other one will get jealous. Start schemin' n shitWhy do they both need to be hooked up?
Hate it when then start schemin' n sh.i.tBecause the other one will get jealous. Start schemin' n shit