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Can this amp power a ported enclosure safely?
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<blockquote data-quote="AnthonyO" data-source="post: 8733150" data-attributes="member: 563887"><p>Long answer: The enclosure depends on the sub. Most subs have recommendations for sealed and ported enclosures. Sounds like your sub has a ported enclosure recommendation. This amp puts out 600 watts RMS at 2ohm. More than sufficient for a lot of subs on the market today. Its not gonna push a DD9500 but more than sufficient for a sub with a 600 watt rms rating. </p><p></p><p>Subsonic: Each octave up is twice as many Hz as the previous one, and dividing any frequency by 2 takes it one octave lower. Therefore, to get your <strong>subsonic filter setting</strong>, take your subwoofer's tuned frequency and multiply it by 0.75. So, if it's tuned to 40 Hz, <strong>set</strong> the <strong>filter</strong> knob to 30 Hz. For the mainstream listener, <strong>setting</strong> a <strong>subsonic filter</strong> around 35 Hz will allow them to hear all their music content, missing nothing on any performance, while protecting their system. Our next articles will also show ways to optimize amp power and cone excursion for the listeners bandwidth. </p><p>This is all from Google search of Subsonic Filter setting</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AnthonyO, post: 8733150, member: 563887"] Long answer: The enclosure depends on the sub. Most subs have recommendations for sealed and ported enclosures. Sounds like your sub has a ported enclosure recommendation. This amp puts out 600 watts RMS at 2ohm. More than sufficient for a lot of subs on the market today. Its not gonna push a DD9500 but more than sufficient for a sub with a 600 watt rms rating. Subsonic: Each octave up is twice as many Hz as the previous one, and dividing any frequency by 2 takes it one octave lower. Therefore, to get your [B]subsonic filter setting[/B], take your subwoofer's tuned frequency and multiply it by 0.75. So, if it's tuned to 40 Hz, [B]set[/B] the [B]filter[/B] knob to 30 Hz. For the mainstream listener, [B]setting[/B] a [B]subsonic filter[/B] around 35 Hz will allow them to hear all their music content, missing nothing on any performance, while protecting their system. Our next articles will also show ways to optimize amp power and cone excursion for the listeners bandwidth. This is all from Google search of Subsonic Filter setting [/QUOTE]
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Can this amp power a ported enclosure safely?
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