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Sub wiring, Ohms, and RMS... oh my
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<blockquote data-quote="Haunz" data-source="post: 8768920" data-attributes="member: 576010"><p>Any monoblock sub amp with stereo RCA inputs is going to sum them in parallel.. Also most music has its sub-bass frequencies mixed on each channel equally anyway...</p><p></p><p>Given if you have different bass tracks going on between Left & Right channels, you will not be able to discern a difference until the drivers are at least 1/4 wavelength separated from one another... At 340m/s at 100 hHz you would need a minimum distance of 0.858 meters before you could possibly discern between what Left and Right channels are playing...</p><p></p><p>It might be significant in a club, or outdoor venue... but not in your vehicle, and probably not significant in your house either...</p><p></p><p>I hope that Clarifies things for you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Haunz, post: 8768920, member: 576010"] Any monoblock sub amp with stereo RCA inputs is going to sum them in parallel.. Also most music has its sub-bass frequencies mixed on each channel equally anyway... Given if you have different bass tracks going on between Left & Right channels, you will not be able to discern a difference until the drivers are at least 1/4 wavelength separated from one another... At 340m/s at 100 hHz you would need a minimum distance of 0.858 meters before you could possibly discern between what Left and Right channels are playing... It might be significant in a club, or outdoor venue... but not in your vehicle, and probably not significant in your house either... I hope that Clarifies things for you. [/QUOTE]
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Sub wiring, Ohms, and RMS... oh my
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