.5ohm is just less resistance allowing the amp to put out more power....but wouldnt it be easier on the amp though to run @ 2 or 4 than .5 ohms
in theory yes. Most of the time the lower the ohm the less efficient it isbut wouldnt it be easier on the amp though to run @ 2 or 4 than .5 ohms
there is a way to mod that exact amp to run at a lower ohm loadI was just wondering, I have a older MTX 1501d and it puts out rated power at 2 ohms and Some subwwofer that I look at only sell it dual 2... so its eaither 1 or 4 ohms //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif and I was thinkg about this amp question.
I quoted you.Don't quote me, because this comes with a lot of less than polished theory. Helotaxi or some other electrically educated contributor can probably clean it up, but...
Driving high impedances with high power requires a lot of voltage, of which a car has little of.
Driving low impedances with high power requires a lot of current, which a car has a lot of.
Compared to a home that has a lot of voltage w/o a lot of current 8 ohm is the std imp.
I know, but im content with it now. and I still have 8 months of warrenty on it //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gifthere is a way to mod that exact amp to run at a lower ohm load