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<blockquote data-quote="forbidden" data-source="post: 387013" data-attributes="member: 552189"><p>Not going to happen, connecting two subs like you have shown would infact drop the load by half again, a dead short is not too far away and this would most certainly send many class D 1 ohm mono amps into protection.</p><p></p><p>In this case you are best of with a series / parallel circuit to have a stable load of 2 ohm mono. A good class D 2 ohm mono sub amp is the Rockford BD1000 series amps. The brand new Rockford amps are a 1 ohm mono amp that would work as well but the last models would probably do a better and more efficient job for you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="forbidden, post: 387013, member: 552189"] Not going to happen, connecting two subs like you have shown would infact drop the load by half again, a dead short is not too far away and this would most certainly send many class D 1 ohm mono amps into protection. In this case you are best of with a series / parallel circuit to have a stable load of 2 ohm mono. A good class D 2 ohm mono sub amp is the Rockford BD1000 series amps. The brand new Rockford amps are a 1 ohm mono amp that would work as well but the last models would probably do a better and more efficient job for you. [/QUOTE]
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