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I have a 92 sedan that has broken tail lights but it came with replacements. But when I tried to put the replacements in, the mounts don't line up and they are shorter then the opening.

2006-12-03 13:41:16 · 3 answers · asked by skoolsuks 2 in Cars & Transportation Car Makes BMW

3 answers

Well marechal_00 is both right and wrong in his answer...

The E36 sedan (starting in 1992 in the USA) and coupe are different body styles and have different tail-lights, so he did answer that question correctly. However, they do share some other minor body and lighting parts between the sedan/coupe such as headlights, fog lamps, front bumpers, side markers, and a few more.

2006-12-04 10:33:14 · answer #1 · answered by Aaron M 1 · 0 0

Yes, starting 1991 BMW 3 series have different 4 doors and 2 doors bodies, with different tail lights. In fact they do no share any external accessories.

2006-12-03 22:20:43 · answer #2 · answered by marechal_00 5 · 0 0

Since you have no contact information, I have no other choice.

In reference to http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AigfP8m0M3K5eu03Gwl51Lnzy6IX?qid=20061203201210AAb8FJr

I think you'd better re-take your "college physics"!!!

_______________________

"i know running parallel increases the Ohms, and series divides the Ohms"

Hew actually has this flip-flopped and you didn't catch it.

"just split the wiring so to run both POS+ to the one POS+ on the amp and both NEG- to the one NEG- "

is how to wire in parallel and will result in a 2 ohm load.

You cannot wire a 4 ohm dual voice coil to 4 ohms, it will either be 2 ohms (parallel) or 8 ohms (series).

You will have to get a single voice coiled 500RMS sub @ 4 ohms to do what your trying to do.

See the middle of my site for subwoofer wiring methods:

http://spkrbox1.spaces.live.com

Formulas:

Subs in series, where Z= total impedance(ohms) and sub# equals each sub (or voice coil in a sub):

Z = (sub1 + sub2 + sub3 + ...) as many as you have

Subs in parallel, where Z= total impedance(ohms) and sub# equals each sub (or voice coil in a sub):

Z = 1 / (1/sub1 + 1/sub2 + 1/sub3 + ...) as many as you have

2006-12-03 15:44:35 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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