Thats everything I'd need to know. Thanks a bunch!The amp is capable of 350w bridged at 4 ohms. If it's wired to an 8 ohm load while bridged it is only capable of roughly half of it's 4 ohm output, regardless of mono or stereo inputs. The best solution would be to find a new driver with dual 2 ohm coils, or a new amp that is a better match, ie one that can put out the power you want at 2 ohms. That is if you want to be using the full power of your amp.
Don't use separate channels to drive the voice coils. You can wreak your equipment this way. Also combining the RCA preouts from the HU with a y cable is not usually recommended, it can cause problems with the HU, directly shorting the left and right channels.
I see why frikk is so confused. Lots of misinformation in this post. Let me make a few corrections, some of which has already been stated.The amp is capable of 350w bridged at 4 ohms. If it's wired to an 8 ohm load while bridged it is only capable of roughly half of it's 4 ohm output, regardless of mono or stereo inputs. The best solution would be to find a new driver with dual 2 ohm coils, or a new amp that is a better match, ie one that can put out the power you want at 2 ohms. That is if you want to be using the full power of your amp.
Don't use separate channels to drive the voice coils. You can wreak your equipment this way. Also combining the RCA preouts from the HU with a y cable is not usually recommended, it can cause problems with the HU, directly shorting the left and right channels.
Bridge amp, wire two coils in series. Connect both rca (L+R) to the amp's input. Done.Thats everything I'd need to know. Thanks a bunch!
I'll end up using one channel most likely so I don't have to worry about the RCA cables. I could do the 8-ohm load, but I don't think it'd matter either way.
I got the sub for free - so no sense in complaining that I can't get maximum power out of the bridge //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
Thank you very much, I appreciate that clearup. That makes a lot of sense! Thanks again //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gifI see why frikk is so confused. Lots of misinformation in this post. Let me make a few corrections, some of which has already been stated.
The amp is rated at 600w at 4 ohm mono, not 350w. As stated several time earlier, 8 ohm mono power is the same as two 4 ohm stereo power combined (350w). The sub is rated at 400w, so 350w (from 8 ohm mono) is about right for that sub. 4 ohm mono power from that amp is 600w, above the power handling rating of the sub. To get full power from that amp, simply adding another same sub will be the best option.
You will not wreck your equipment by wiring in stereo. If by a slim chance you come across a recording with bass in stereo that has different material per channel, the difference in output will be added or canceled. This is much like wiring two coils out of phase, which will result in no sound output, not the sub 'tearing itself apart'.
As far as the RCA situation, we are not combining the outputs from the HU's preouts into one. Its the other way around. 1 cable to 2 cable out.
I may be beating a dead horse, but is there a disadvantage over just connecting my two voice coils to a single channel in parallel? Yeah - I won't be maximizing the utilization of my amp. Oh well, I can live with that.Bridge amp, wire two coils in series. Connect both rca (L+R) to the amp's input. Done.
I may be beating a dead horse, but is there a disadvantage over just connecting my two voice coils to a single channel in parallel? Yeah - I won't be maximizing the utilization of my amp. Oh well, I can live with that.
This can damage the sub, don't do it.1. Running it in stereo (Left to the Voice Coil 1, Right to Voice Coil 2) is a bad idea, correct? This would probably damage my sub since the signals would be out of phase (and possibly completely different)
As dipitydo mentioned, this is a myth.This can damage the sub, don't do it.