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<blockquote data-quote="Aurorav8" data-source="post: 283473" data-attributes="member: 548164"><p>The way bridging works is you are using the full output power from each channel of the amp, and you are effectively reducing the speaker load on the amp. So basically one channel drives the positive side of the signal and the other channel pulls the negative side of the signal. The speaker load is split between the two channels so whatever the speaker rating is it still applies to the power equations. However since each channel is seeing half the load you have to make sure the amp is built to perform at the lower impedence.</p><p></p><p>At least, that's how I always understood bridging....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Aurorav8, post: 283473, member: 548164"] The way bridging works is you are using the full output power from each channel of the amp, and you are effectively reducing the speaker load on the amp. So basically one channel drives the positive side of the signal and the other channel pulls the negative side of the signal. The speaker load is split between the two channels so whatever the speaker rating is it still applies to the power equations. However since each channel is seeing half the load you have to make sure the amp is built to perform at the lower impedence. At least, that's how I always understood bridging.... [/QUOTE]
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