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<blockquote data-quote="skadude016" data-source="post: 1502385" data-attributes="member: 546903"><p>This is the kind of stuff I'm confused about. RMS, OHM, stuff like that.</p><p></p><p>like prowler said RMS is what the speaker/woofer is rated to be given. It is good to stay at around that area but going below RMS will not hurt the speaker or woofer. Amp's RMS is what is how much is how many continuos watts are being pushed from the amp at a given voltage. Ohm's are the impedence of that speaker/woofer. if you have a dual 2 ohm woofer you can wire it in such a way to get 1 ohm or 4 ohm's. If your amp is only stable at 2 ohm's it would be wise to wire to 4 ohm's. wiring it to a 1 ohm load could cause overheating and or frying the amp.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="skadude016, post: 1502385, member: 546903"] This is the kind of stuff I'm confused about. RMS, OHM, stuff like that. like prowler said RMS is what the speaker/woofer is rated to be given. It is good to stay at around that area but going below RMS will not hurt the speaker or woofer. Amp's RMS is what is how much is how many continuos watts are being pushed from the amp at a given voltage. Ohm's are the impedence of that speaker/woofer. if you have a dual 2 ohm woofer you can wire it in such a way to get 1 ohm or 4 ohm's. If your amp is only stable at 2 ohm's it would be wise to wire to 4 ohm's. wiring it to a 1 ohm load could cause overheating and or frying the amp. [/QUOTE]
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