Go to http://www.reaudio.com and find out. To answer your question, yes they do.Do they even have a 3 inch coil?
3 in coil has more area for cooling so the coil size has something to do with itLOL....coil size has nothing to do with rms. It could have a 2.5" coil and still have 600 rms/1200 peak.
First off your a moron. If it had a 4" coil and had a 600 rms/1200 peak rating, I'd give it that. A 3" VC that big doesn't mean a bigger area for cooling...go google the mechanics and functions of a subwoofer and learn the soft/hard parts of it. #2, if a sub had a 2.5" VC and had a 600 rms rating and I gave it that and blew in the PROPER and suggested enclosure, warranty will be in the works. Period.3 in coil has more area for cooling so the coil size has something to do with it
i wont give a 2.5 in coil much more then 600 rms thats a lot of heat for such a small coil
If you can find one of those inline SSF ~ 25hz that would be good.
says the guy who tells people to run the max wattage rating of a sub.WoW you guys are still tripping
set ur gains right and you'll be AOK....so some are saying not to give it 800, i got 2 12s and there going to be getting around 750 each, good or not whats the word? i dont wanna be in the same position as this guy. even tho my box is being built to spec, and my amp as ssf
i am not bottoming out because of the power its because i dont have a ssf youll be fine with that powerso some are saying not to give it 800, i got 2 12s and there going to be getting around 750 each, good or not whats the word? i dont wanna be in the same position as this guy. even tho my box is being built to spec, and my amp as ssf