Three DVC 4 ohm subs in parallel-series results in a 2.67 ohm load.
Wired like so http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/TRI-SERIES-DUAL.jpg
Three DVC 2 ohm subs in series-parallel results in a 3 ohm load.
Wired like so http://i81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/TRI-DVC-PARSER.jpg
The amps watts RMS must be at most 3 X the watts RMS of one sub and be stable at the ohms listed above for the specific sub types. Also be sure the amp you buy is CEA-2006 compliant. It will say in the specs of the amp.
See my site for more info http://spkrbox1.spaces.live.com
2007-02-07 04:27:51
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There's always a way. The question is would it be worth your time. A bridged 2 channel generally needs a 4 ohm load to perform at its best. If these are 4 ohm single voice coils you pretty much have to go all series for 12 ohms, and the amp won't produce much power at all (but it would work), or in series for 1.3 ohms where the amp would probably immediately shut down, or get hot in a matter of seconds and shut down. If they're dual 4's you can wire the coils parallel and the subs in series for a final impedance of 6 ohms at the amp, which would work pretty well. 6 is close enough to 4 that it won't significantly decrease the amp's 4 ohm bridged power.
2016-05-24 03:04:45
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answer #2
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answered by DawnKarin 4
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Sorry, but I need to do a little bit of flaming on this one. All,... please answer these technical questions if you have some true knowledge of the problem. These questions are not a matter of opinion, but fact.
There is NO "bridge" on an amp! You can't have multiples of something that is not a physical object. Bridging is a verb! It is the act of combining two channels into one.
"Lowering the ohms" is not going to effect the subwoofers at all,...they could care less. The amp is the only object being compromised in the lower impedance equation. Amps run hotter at lower impedance levels, and heat kills any electronics.
Having an amp with a 1 ohm load is NOT going to make an amp "cleaner". The amp would theoretically produce more power, but at a loss in quality and reliability.
Sparky's answer is perfect!
2007-02-07 10:12:11
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answer #3
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answered by Andrew K 3
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Yes you can do that and depending how you do it you can make the speaker come out to the amp at 1ohm wich will make it sound more clearer. You can google "speaker connections"
and it shows you the different ways you can connect them soo it will sound better
2007-02-07 03:28:42
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answer #4
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answered by enano 4
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yes but lowers the ohms and and if you do it another way it will higer the ohms
if you lower the ohms it could blow ur subs if thier not 2 or 1 ohm stabel and it could blow ur ampp if not 1 or 2 ohm stabel
2007-02-07 05:41:44
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answer #5
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answered by johndoe 3
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yea just make sure they are all running the same bridge otherwise your gonna have an unbalanced system
2007-02-07 03:26:13
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answer #6
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answered by chance y 2
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