I am quite familiar with that particular subwoofer (hint check my signature). They came in Dual 2, 4, and 6 ohm versions. A 10W3v2-D4 DOES NOT have dual 2 ohm coils!That is what I got off the website...
http://mobile.jlaudio.com/pdfs/10W3v2_MAN.pdf
I don't know jack about it which is why I went to the website and looked it up.I am quite familiar with that particular subwoofer (hint check my signature). They came in Dual 2, 4, and 6 ohm versions. A 10W3v2-D4 DOES NOT have dual 2 ohm coils!
Great explanation, thanks for breaking it down for me and thanks for the rec's on the amps!Well, if you have a dual 4 ohm sub, you need to find something that delivers 300 watts RMS @ 2 or 8 ohms. If you have a dual 2 ohms sub, you need to find something that delivers 300 watts RMS @ 1 or 4 ohms.
**THIS** amp will give you 350 clean RMS watts @ 2 ohms. Ignore the 750 because that is peak output and a big fat lie with regards to RMS!
**This** amp will give you 300 watts RMS @ 4 ohms
It really all boils down to how much you want to spend and what your goals are.