omg this is great CA related...

m3dia_lab
10+ year member

CarAudio.com Elite
copy and paste from youtube

phattacorider (1 week ago) Show Hide +1 Marked as spam Reply | Spam When a signal from the amplifier passed through the voice coil, it creates an electromagentic field. This field opposes the field produced by the magnet and pole piece, which is what gives you movement. Having a dual voice coil subwoofer allows for different wiring configurations. A dual 2ohm coil will give you the option to wire it to 4ohms (less power, more SQ, less SPL) or 1ohm (more power, more SPL, less SQ). It all depends on the amp you have and the kind of bass you want.

then i setn him some message telling him how he is a dumbass, and i get this:

Are you serious? Where the hell did you read that nonsense at? It's not more power, it's less impedance. The lower the impedance load, the lower the signal to noice ratio. But when the impedance load is dropped, amplifier current increases as a result. Geez, where the **** did pick that **** up from?

//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/redface.gif.62fdbfe1a101588a808c4cff71bcb942.gif

 
thisfinguy.jpg
lol

 
copy and paste from youtube

phattacorider (1 week ago) Show Hide +1 Marked as spam Reply | Spam When a signal from the amplifier passed through the voice coil, it creates an electromagentic field. This field opposes the field produced by the magnet and pole piece, which is what gives you movement. Having a dual voice coil subwoofer allows for different wiring configurations. A dual 2ohm coil will give you the option to wire it to 4ohms (less power, more SQ, less SPL) or 1ohm (more power, more SPL, less SQ). It all depends on the amp you have and the kind of bass you want.

then i setn him some message telling him how he is a dumbass, and i get this:

Are you serious? Where the hell did you read that nonsense at? It's not more power, it's less impedance. The lower the impedance load, the lower the signal to noice ratio. But when the impedance load is dropped, amplifier current increases as a result. Geez, where the **** did pick that **** up from?

//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/redface.gif.62fdbfe1a101588a808c4cff71bcb942.gif
How does a speaker work?

 
copy and paste from youtube

phattacorider (1 week ago) Show Hide +1 Marked as spam Reply | Spam When a signal from the amplifier passed through the voice coil, it creates an electromagentic field. This field opposes the field produced by the magnet and pole piece, which is what gives you movement. Having a dual voice coil subwoofer allows for different wiring configurations. A dual 2ohm coil will give you the option to wire it to 4ohms (less power, more SQ, less SPL) or 1ohm (more power, more SPL, less SQ). It all depends on the amp you have and the kind of bass you want.

then i setn him some message telling him how he is a dumbass, and i get this:

Are you serious? Where the hell did you read that nonsense at? It's not more power, it's less impedance. The lower the impedance load, the lower the signal to noice ratio. But when the impedance load is dropped, amplifier current increases as a result. Geez, where the **** did pick that **** up from?

//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/redface.gif.62fdbfe1a101588a808c4cff71bcb942.gif




 
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