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dvc wiring at 2 ohm load

Printed From: the12volt.com
Forum Name: Car Audio
Forum Discription: Car Stereos, Amplifiers, Crossovers, Processors, Speakers, Subwoofers, etc.
URL: https://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp?tid=103105
Printed Date: April 25, 2024 at 10:37 PM


Topic: dvc wiring at 2 ohm load

Posted By: hookedonaudio
Subject: dvc wiring at 2 ohm load
Date Posted: March 16, 2008 at 1:00 AM

In the wiring wizard diagram it shows that you need to connect one of the subwoofer negative terminals to one of the positive to get a two ohm load, I thought that you should never connect a pos to neg in any situation. I learned the hard way by accidentally touching the pos to a neg on my new water heater in the utility room, it was a shocking experience.



Replies:

Posted By: slipitysmooth
Date Posted: March 16, 2008 at 8:52 AM
Are you looking at this page? (DVC 4 Ohm)

Wiring Options

If you do have a 4 ohm DVC, then you need to wire it in Parallel to get a 2 Ohm load as shown on the link...if you are wiring in series (in this case it would give you a 8ohm load), then it is just fine to connect + to - as you are talking about resistance here...and its not a voltage source or something of the like.




Posted By: audioman2007
Date Posted: March 16, 2008 at 11:19 AM
hookedonaudio.... speaker wire positive and negative are different then a heaters positive and negative. Speakers are measured in ohms, heaters are measured in volts. In some situations, you need to wire a positive speaker coil to a negative to get the desired amp load. For instance if you have a 2 channel amp but have 2 dual coil subs, you would take channel 1's positive to coil 1's positive. Take coil 1's negative to coil 2's positive. Then take coil 2's negative to channel 1's negative. This would make an 8 ohm load on that channel (depending on the impedence of the subs). If you were to take these same subs but wire each coils positive and negative to channel 1's positive and negative, this would then give that channel a 2 ohm load, then add the fact of the other channel as well would then give the amp a total of 1 ohm load which 2 channel amps cant handle thus ruining the amp. Understand?




Posted By: hookedonaudio
Date Posted: March 16, 2008 at 12:30 PM
I hooked up both 2000 watt unmatched amps to both of my rockford hx2 power subs which are 2 ohms each. the subs dont hit near as hard now with two amps. would I be better off to run the lanzar amp which is one ohm stable to the the subs and wire them both to a 2 ohm load, or would I be better to run all 4 of my 12"s to both of the amps. The only bad thing is the profile amp is two channel and the lanzar is one channel.





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