If it is 400 at 4ohm, that means the final impedance allowed is 4 ohms. Quit making it hard, you can run 1 4 ohm SVC or 2 2ohm in series, to name the easiest.im talking internal not external if his amp says 100x2 at 4 ohm,,200x2 at 2ohm,,then it should be 400 at 4 ohm mono,,which would be the bridged channle seeing half the ohm load wired to it right
I talked to someone at crutchfield that said bridging two 4 ohm subs would cause the amp to go into protect mode. Thanks for the responses though. im about to get a mono amp for the subs anywayAnd the amp only gets a 4 ohm load and only has 1 channel, i. e. 1 positive and 1 negative.
why do most people bridge 2 channel amps?? you do realize everytime you reply to someone it shows more and more just how much you do not know. if you're really certified i'm glad i didn't waste any money on certification because apparently it doesn't actually teach you how to do anything.Make sure you have a bridgeable amp, not all amps are oh and why do you wanna bridge a 2 channel amp?
yes this is what I wanted to know. Thank you. was looking to bridge it to obtain more power from my amp until I buy a mono amp for the subsif you bridge 2 4ohm subs the amp will see 2 ohms each channel will see 1 ohm. the ohm load is split between the channels.
what would you do if you had a single 4 ohm sub or two single 8 ohm subs?Make sure you have a bridgeable amp, not all amps are oh and why do you wanna bridge a 2 channel amp?