ohms?
well in any case, your subs will most likely stay in a working state. Rockford is notorious for over rating there amplifiers. The thermal will def not kick in and save your amp if the impeadence (ohms) is too low. the only way to connect two dual voice coil subs to a stereo amp (2 channel) is by a series parallel combination. You need to series the two voice coils together on the subs and then parallel them on the amp(bridge).
I have found this to be somewhat true in their higher end amplifiers. I've just never liked the sound that that ive gotten from them as i do from other companies. Their FET's inside the amp are too small. Well I'm mainly talking about their stuff from a couple of years ago. I'm liking what i see from them now but am still dissappointed in their overall performance.
ORIGINAL: eshballa5
well in any case, your subs will most likely stay in a working state. Rockford is notorious for over rating there amplifiers. The thermal will def not kick in and save your amp if the impeadence (ohms) is too low. the only way to connect two dual voice coil subs to a stereo amp (2 channel) is by a series parallel combination. You need to series the two voice coils together on the subs and then parallel them on the amp(bridge).
well in any case, your subs will most likely stay in a working state. Rockford is notorious for over rating there amplifiers. The thermal will def not kick in and save your amp if the impeadence (ohms) is too low. the only way to connect two dual voice coil subs to a stereo amp (2 channel) is by a series parallel combination. You need to series the two voice coils together on the subs and then parallel them on the amp(bridge).
No, because your subs are still wired at 2 ohms, and the amp can only handle 4 ohms...
What you need to do on your subs, to make the amp happier, is wire the voice coils in series, then the subs in parallel.
Or buy a 2 ohm stable amp (preferably mono for subs...)
What you need to do on your subs, to make the amp happier, is wire the voice coils in series, then the subs in parallel.
Or buy a 2 ohm stable amp (preferably mono for subs...)
I really think that you should take your system to a local installer and let them install it for you. That way, nothing gets messed up and you dont hurt your subs or your amp. Im not trying to be mean, just honest.
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