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Ohm DVC Amp Question
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<blockquote data-quote="Audiofoshzzl" data-source="post: 412279" data-attributes="member: 553920"><p>You can hook up each voicecoil seperately to each channel of the amp if you want to. However you won't have two ohms to the amp with a dual four-ohm voicecoil subwoofer. The coils would have to be paralleled together to achieve two ohms. If you hooked it up seperately one coil-per-channel you would be running the amp in a four-ohm stereo mode. If you run that particular amp in the four-ohm mode than you would realisticly only be pushing about two hundred watts to each coil. If you parallel the coils of the woofers together and then bridge it to the amplifier than you would probably get about 900-950 watts to the woofer. Read up on Ohm's Law that will help you out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Audiofoshzzl, post: 412279, member: 553920"] You can hook up each voicecoil seperately to each channel of the amp if you want to. However you won't have two ohms to the amp with a dual four-ohm voicecoil subwoofer. The coils would have to be paralleled together to achieve two ohms. If you hooked it up seperately one coil-per-channel you would be running the amp in a four-ohm stereo mode. If you run that particular amp in the four-ohm mode than you would realisticly only be pushing about two hundred watts to each coil. If you parallel the coils of the woofers together and then bridge it to the amplifier than you would probably get about 900-950 watts to the woofer. Read up on Ohm's Law that will help you out. [/QUOTE]
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