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it will have a pic on it or u will have to put the neg on the right side of the amp an the pos on the left side an if it dont have to channels then its not made for bridging
A Class D amp only has 1 set of out puts for sub's. so it will only be a left and right pos and neg.As i look your amp it is a 2 channel so both speaker terminals are internally bridged so you can hook the to either set as it will be the same since they are cross overed internally. i found you a good guide for your amp i will include it and should help you greatly. . hoped i helped you. http://www.parts-express.com/pedocs/manuals/263-800-phoenix-gold-manual-41601.pdf d
for better power yes one ohm but amp must be 1 ohm stable.and both subs will have to be 4 ohm subs to get the 1 ohm needed .If its a class D amp both speakers outs are bridged internally so either is ok to use look see if there is a bridging line on speakers that runs from one side to other and will say bridging. if not any side will work.a manu would help you find yours or you can look one up online.al
If you look at the speaker hookup it will say bridged and have a line going to the two that you should use....If it doesnt then it might be an amp that you cant bridge
well if the amp is a mono block for sure you just choose any combination of 1 positive and 1 negative to wire your subs. They are actually summed inside the amp. meaning both positives go to the same terminal inside and both negatives to the same negative on the inside. It's just that way for ease of wiring in high wattage and multi sub systems
If you have a DVC 4ohm speaker, and you are using both voice coils, the amp is seeing a 2ohm load.
If you bridge the amp, you CAN run both subs as long as the amp is Two Ohms Stable.
Wire each subs voice coils in parallel.(Positive to positve, neg to neg.) (2ohms) each.
Then wire the two subs in series.(Neg from amp to neg of sub one, pos of sub one to neg of sub two. then pos of sub two to pos of amp.
If it sounds too hard, leave it as you are already running the amp at two ohms.
Normally right positive and left neg. Your amp should have indicators on the terminals. Of the four you should have a separate + and - for each channel. This tells you which channel is for pos, and which is for neg. If no markings switch for each one left pos/right neg or right pos/left neg. It will only work on one way.
Could you elaborate on how the speaker is bridged?
I think you want to hook up a single speaker to a stereo speaker output.
In this case, you would strap (bridge?) the right and left speaker terminals by running a short wire from A right negative to A left negative. Then strap A right positive to A left positive -- this will give you mono output on either of the right or left speaker terminals -- connect your speaker to either one of these.
Do you know what the ohm rating is for the speaker outs on the amp and also the speaker itself?
you need to specify what you are talking about and maybe i can help you but as of now i have no clue. are you talking about bridging an amp to make it run mono or single channel if that is the case you typically use the left channel positive and the right channel negative but on most bridgeable amps it is marked somehow whether it is something like the pos and neg are circled or there is a line drawn on it showing the 2 connecting but regardless it is typically the left pos and right neg. if this is not your question please clarify and i will try helping.
sounds like they have your sub amp in mono but they put the speakers in series which totally cancels the benefit of running your amp in mono. you will probably be happier if you just hook the left speaker to left plus and minus and the right to right plus and minus. Cuz even though subs aren't directional they do pass some higher frequencies that are and that dilutes the stereo effect.
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