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Will bridging like this work?
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<blockquote data-quote="junocdx" data-source="post: 248660" data-attributes="member: 546770"><p>I just bought an amp from my friend that is supposed to to 620RMS bridged. It isn't stable at 2 ohms bridged, so I have to hook it up in 4 ohms. The amp has a switch to choose between 2 and 4 ohms.</p><p></p><p>My friend had it hooked up where the speakers were just wired normally in the box, and from the terminals on the box, just took both negatives and both positives and hooked them up like he had it bridged.</p><p></p><p>Basically, instead of hooking the two subs up to their individual channel, he hooked both up to one channel and bridged it. Then he set the switch on 4 ohms. Would I be gaining any power out of the amp if I did it like this? Im not sure what it does per channel. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="junocdx, post: 248660, member: 546770"] I just bought an amp from my friend that is supposed to to 620RMS bridged. It isn't stable at 2 ohms bridged, so I have to hook it up in 4 ohms. The amp has a switch to choose between 2 and 4 ohms. My friend had it hooked up where the speakers were just wired normally in the box, and from the terminals on the box, just took both negatives and both positives and hooked them up like he had it bridged. Basically, instead of hooking the two subs up to their individual channel, he hooked both up to one channel and bridged it. Then he set the switch on 4 ohms. Would I be gaining any power out of the amp if I did it like this? Im not sure what it does per channel. [IMG]//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif[/IMG] [/QUOTE]
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Will bridging like this work?
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