rmeekerwrx
Junior Member
ring & Sub...
First post here, so if I am missing any details I apologize.
My current setup includes:
Head Unit - JVC KW-NT500HDT Front Door Speakers - AlpineSPR-606.5" Type-R Rear Door Speakers - AlpineSPS-410 4"Type-S Amp - Hifonics ZRX1000.4 1000 watt peak power, Class A/B, 2/3/4 channel. Cadence 2 Farad Capacitor.
I was very limited in speaker options due to weird sizes of my WRX.
My main question is about adding a sub. I have the amp and capacitor already mounted on a custom rack and really do not want to change it. Is it possible to parallel wire the four speakers to channel 1/2 and then bridge channel 3/4 and wire the sub to that?
I am also not sure what type of sub to go with? I am leaning towards as an Alpine type R 12" as I know this will fit in the box I have. But I am not sure If I should go with 2 or 4 ohms, and if I should go with single or dual voice coils, also what powerlevelitshould be?
Any advice would help and be extremely appreciated as I am not too knowledgeable when it gets into the fine details of things.
First post here, so if I am missing any details I apologize.
My current setup includes:
Head Unit - JVC KW-NT500HDT Front Door Speakers - AlpineSPR-606.5" Type-R Rear Door Speakers - AlpineSPS-410 4"Type-S Amp - Hifonics ZRX1000.4 1000 watt peak power, Class A/B, 2/3/4 channel. Cadence 2 Farad Capacitor.
I was very limited in speaker options due to weird sizes of my WRX.
My main question is about adding a sub. I have the amp and capacitor already mounted on a custom rack and really do not want to change it. Is it possible to parallel wire the four speakers to channel 1/2 and then bridge channel 3/4 and wire the sub to that?
I am also not sure what type of sub to go with? I am leaning towards as an Alpine type R 12" as I know this will fit in the box I have. But I am not sure If I should go with 2 or 4 ohms, and if I should go with single or dual voice coils, also what powerlevelitshould be?
Any advice would help and be extremely appreciated as I am not too knowledgeable when it gets into the fine details of things.