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<blockquote data-quote="squeak9798" data-source="post: 575561" data-attributes="member: 555320"><p>Yup. Even if the signals are different (say the amp does have two gains and they aren't set right), nothing bad will happen.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Depends on a lot of things. There may be nothing different. But, for example, my old Eclipse 34230 was <em>only</em> stable to 4ohm/channel, and <em>could not</em> be bridged. So, there is the perfect opportunity to run one channel per coil on a dual 4ohm/coil sub. Or, if you have a dual 4ohm/coil sub and a 2-channel amp that can't be bridged to 2ohm, you may get more power out of it by running 1 coil per channel instead of running the amp bridged at 8ohm</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="squeak9798, post: 575561, member: 555320"] Yup. Even if the signals are different (say the amp does have two gains and they aren't set right), nothing bad will happen. Depends on a lot of things. There may be nothing different. But, for example, my old Eclipse 34230 was [I]only[/I] stable to 4ohm/channel, and [I]could not[/I] be bridged. So, there is the perfect opportunity to run one channel per coil on a dual 4ohm/coil sub. Or, if you have a dual 4ohm/coil sub and a 2-channel amp that can't be bridged to 2ohm, you may get more power out of it by running 1 coil per channel instead of running the amp bridged at 8ohm [/QUOTE]
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