help with ohm load...
There are 2 long write ups in the FAQ area but I'll sum it up for you. You'll want it wired the way you have it (Parrallel wired Voice coils, Stereo wired amp) or you'll want to bridge the amp and wire the subs up in Series and parrallel the 2 leads from the speaker box.
What that means (parrallel and series) is this: Series is in a line. + to - to + to - and so forth. Basically it goes in a straight line.
Parrallel is the Pairing or 3,4,5,.... of the SAME Polarity (+ and - are polarities like on a magnit or speaker, or battery) Basically you take all the + and put them together. You'll then take all the -'s and put them together.
For Bass applications it is better to Wire the subs in a Bridged setting. Bass is omni-directional in smaller Enviroments so unless a rattle or a buzz is causing noise you cannot really tell where it is comming from. So Stereo is useless in a Small setting. Bridge takes the 2 signals and sums then together to create a new MONO signal. When a Song then FADES from left to right you'll notice a lower amount of bass. Normal.
If you run Subs in Stereo and a play music though, It'll cause 1 sub to always run a little more power to it and slightly louder due to the nature of recording. Drums and Bass players are almost always off to the sides. When the Music fades left to right it then basically shuts down that channel and speaker for that moment. The loss of 1 sub and power is a 3dB drop. So MEASURED WISE and somewhat audible wise you'll loose a little more volume. I recommend Bridge'ing an Amp for BASS/Sub applications.
This is how you'll wire up the System if you want the Subs to be in Seriers/Parrallel arrangement (IE Bridged) : You'll wire each sub in series. 2 4ohm loads then become 8ohms. In Series you just add the values and get a total.
Then you'll wire the 2 speaker wire sets in parrallel. Just put the +'s together and the -'s together. Simple. For straight SAME value resistance, Just divide the amount by 2. (8ohms/2 subs = 4ohms)
For the subs you'll go from the negative on 1 coil to the positive on the other one. Then from the Terminal Cap, you connect + to the + that is un-wired. Then put the - from the Terminal cap to the un-wired - on the sub.
It'll look like Option 2 on the pic below.
Also, Here is the link to do that:
http://www.sounddomain.com/shop/woof...dvc&x=134&y=12
Last edited by Richiec77; Jun 17, 2008 at 03:25 PM.


