Welcome to the forum //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wave.gif.002382ce7d7c19757ab945cc69819de1.gif Let's take this step by step and see if we can make some headway, shall we?
OK...I recently purchased two Kicker Solo Baric 12'' L7's with dual 4 ohm voice coils...one of my questions is this...The amp that I am looking at is a Hifonics Zues Zxi 1006 2 channel amplifier...it will be running at 500 watts RMS to each speaker if I run them at 2 ohms...which I was planning on doing...however...I was doing this only to break them in
Contrary to the popular belief of it being a necessity you do not need to "break in" subwoofers prior to whatever else you plan to do with them. Urban legend and a continually disproven one at that. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/fyi.gif.9f1f679348da7204ce960cfc74bca8e0.gif
I was planning on a couple months down the road purchasing another amp so that I could bridge and max each amp to each speaker...it says it will then be running 1000 watts rms to each speaker at 4 ohms
It will only be sending 1000 watts to each speaker if the amp's output is 2000 watts.
and it says Min. Impedance for bridging and maxing is at 4 ohms...does this mean that if I bridge and max my amp that I can not run it at 2 ohms and would HAVE to run it at 4?
Most (not all but most) amps are
not stable at impedence loads lower than 4 Ohms when in bridged mode. If your particular amp states that the lowest impendence it will run at safely when bridged is 4 Ohms then presenting it with a load lower than that can send the amp into protection (best case scenario) or possibly damage something internally in the amp (worst case scenario)
it does not give a spec for the RMS rating for running at 2 ohms for being bridged and maxed...and when it said the Min. Imp. is 4 ohms for being bridged that got me thinking
I'm not understanding what you are meaning exactly by "maxed" ~ can you elaborate on that, please?
My second question is this...Ok..I have two subwoofers obviously and was curious that if I went the direction of a class D mono channel amp how would this work when I would need two channels?
Easy answer. You do not
need two channels to run more than one subwoofer. So long as the amp in question outputs appropriate power for the drivers you are wanting to power with it and can accept the resistance load you are going to attach to it then it will be fine. Not only do people run 2 subs off of a single channel amplifier there are people that run 3, 4, sometimes 6 or more off of a single amp. It all depends on the setup in question.
I know you can OBVIOUSLY do it because I have numerous friends that have done it...but my question is...what does the power rating become? For example...if I went the direction of getting a Mono channel amp that was 1600 watts RMS at 2 ohms...what would the general power rating be if I hooked up 2 speakers to it?...any and all help would be greatly appreciated....thanks in advance....
It would be entirely dependant on the impedence presented to the amp. If the amp does 1600w at 2 Ohms then it likely does 800~1000w or so at 4 Ohms. So - if you show it a 4 Ohm load then it will do the 800~1000 watts. If you show it a 2 Ohm load then it will give you the 1600 watts output.
Have a look
here and you can see multiple wiring methods for single or multiple subwoofers. It is not a be all end all guide but it's a handy quick reference.