Jump to content

tgunnem

Members
  • Posts

    11
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by tgunnem

  1. First off let me start with this. If you run any DC amp below 1 ohm, you WILL void your warranty. Now lets get to the lesson. If you are asking this question, then you have no clue about nominal and reactive ohm loads and should not be wiring any amplifier below 1 ohm. Nominal Ohm Load= What you are wired to at the amp before any signal is applied. Example- If you have 2 Dual 2 ohms subs wired in parallel, then you would be seeing a .5ohm load at the amp. Reactive Ohm Load= actual ohm load seen by the amp once a signal is applied to the sub. Example- If you have 2 Dual 2 ohm subs wired in parallel down to .5 ohm nominal and then apply a signal to the subs, now the subs are effected by different variables that cause impedance rise. Moral of the story is, if you dont have a reactive ohm load of 1 ohm, the amp will protect and it will put out 0 watts. So you still want to know how much power the 7.5k will put out, 7500w at 1 ohm reactive and 12v. If you see .35 ohm reactive at the amp, then you probably just cost yourself $1000 repair bill because your amp is gonna go boom. lmfao Please explain to me the point of your very first post on this site being "laughing my fucking ass off" I am going to report you so the mods can keep an eye on you to see if you are going to be a useful member or just a douche bag with nothing useful to add. hahahahahahah u mad bro? i didnt kno we couldnt laugh i dont see that on the forum rules. if u rly wanna know i was lmfao @ i thought ur post was good til i read the dozens after it. please dont reply to me with any nerd rage kthxbye
  2. First off let me start with this. If you run any DC amp below 1 ohm, you WILL void your warranty. Now lets get to the lesson. If you are asking this question, then you have no clue about nominal and reactive ohm loads and should not be wiring any amplifier below 1 ohm. Nominal Ohm Load= What you are wired to at the amp before any signal is applied. Example- If you have 2 Dual 2 ohms subs wired in parallel, then you would be seeing a .5ohm load at the amp. Reactive Ohm Load= actual ohm load seen by the amp once a signal is applied to the sub. Example- If you have 2 Dual 2 ohm subs wired in parallel down to .5 ohm nominal and then apply a signal to the subs, now the subs are effected by different variables that cause impedance rise. Moral of the story is, if you dont have a reactive ohm load of 1 ohm, the amp will protect and it will put out 0 watts. So you still want to know how much power the 7.5k will put out, 7500w at 1 ohm reactive and 12v. If you see .35 ohm reactive at the amp, then you probably just cost yourself $1000 repair bill because your amp is gonna go boom. lmfao
×
×
  • Create New...