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<blockquote data-quote="ThxOne" data-source="post: 8696140" data-attributes="member: 675210"><p>If you are being realistic with what you want, how much room you have to work with and are willing to give up (bass takes space), what you can afford or what you want to spend you should be fine. Your doors hold factory 6x9's (There are speaker adapters that allow you to mount a 6.5" and a tweeter in a 6x9 location). Don't let "watts" fool you... I have a 75w peak 35w rms JBL 8" sub in my house and it shakes the place in an open room. The enclosure should be a priority, don't skimp on it.</p><p></p><p>There are several 75w x 4 + 500 x 1 and 100w x 4 + 600 x 1 RMS amps out there such as Kicker, Rockford Fosgate, Alpine and so on. If you put a 12" sub in an enclosure made for that sub and it handles 500w rms and you put a 500 or 600w rms amp on it and set the gain correctly I promise you that single 12" sub will move a lot of air and more importantly it will do it all day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ThxOne, post: 8696140, member: 675210"] If you are being realistic with what you want, how much room you have to work with and are willing to give up (bass takes space), what you can afford or what you want to spend you should be fine. Your doors hold factory 6x9's (There are speaker adapters that allow you to mount a 6.5" and a tweeter in a 6x9 location). Don't let "watts" fool you... I have a 75w peak 35w rms JBL 8" sub in my house and it shakes the place in an open room. The enclosure should be a priority, don't skimp on it. There are several 75w x 4 + 500 x 1 and 100w x 4 + 600 x 1 RMS amps out there such as Kicker, Rockford Fosgate, Alpine and so on. If you put a 12" sub in an enclosure made for that sub and it handles 500w rms and you put a 500 or 600w rms amp on it and set the gain correctly I promise you that single 12" sub will move a lot of air and more importantly it will do it all day. [/QUOTE]
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