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Help with 6.5 and 6X9 Install
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<blockquote data-quote="benzmansl65amg" data-source="post: 6987383" data-attributes="member: 576098"><p>You can bridge the amp but amps are only stable at 4ohm bridged. I am assuming your speakers are 4 ohm. If you wire two in parallel you have a 2 ohm load. You should run all to their own channel. I have run type r components off of head units and they sounded great. off of an excelon kenwood head unit in one of my friend's setups. You can either run each speaker to its own channel or run two in parallel to one channel and the other two to a single channel leaving 2 channels unused. I would run each to its own channel or like the previous person said get a two channel that is 2 ohm stable or a good 4 channel.</p><p></p><p>Hope this helps,</p><p></p><p>Joe</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="benzmansl65amg, post: 6987383, member: 576098"] You can bridge the amp but amps are only stable at 4ohm bridged. I am assuming your speakers are 4 ohm. If you wire two in parallel you have a 2 ohm load. You should run all to their own channel. I have run type r components off of head units and they sounded great. off of an excelon kenwood head unit in one of my friend's setups. You can either run each speaker to its own channel or run two in parallel to one channel and the other two to a single channel leaving 2 channels unused. I would run each to its own channel or like the previous person said get a two channel that is 2 ohm stable or a good 4 channel. Hope this helps, Joe [/QUOTE]
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Help with 6.5 and 6X9 Install
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