SpiderBy
05-17-2009, 07:26 PM
Hi folks,
Decided to ask my dumb question here.
Never had a sub before so it was my first install.
And I also chose a bumpy road of building a custom fiberglass sub enclosure.
And finally I did it (I gonna post a write-up of that adventure in a while)!
Today I finally hooked up my mono-amp Alpine MRP-M500 with my 10" Alpine Type R sub (1022D). Well, finally listening to a low & clean bass was a good compensation for the effort.
But since there is no perfection, I started to hesitate that I chose not the right sub :)
The problem is that it is dual-voice-coil 2 ohm sub and since I hooked up it in series with the amp it goes with 4 ohm load and 300 Watt RMS. And I can't connect it in parallel cause it would mean 1 ohm load for amp which is not recommended.
It seems I should have chosen Alpine 1042D sub which I could connect in parallel and get 2 ohm load to the amp so it could drive 500 Watt RMS.
Guys, please tell me if I really made a big mistake.
Will I hear a significant difference if I replace my 1022D sub connected in series with 1042D connected in parallel? I am not much in getting streets blown, I just would like to get a nice clean bass with my setup and be sure I made it right.
Decided to ask my dumb question here.
Never had a sub before so it was my first install.
And I also chose a bumpy road of building a custom fiberglass sub enclosure.
And finally I did it (I gonna post a write-up of that adventure in a while)!
Today I finally hooked up my mono-amp Alpine MRP-M500 with my 10" Alpine Type R sub (1022D). Well, finally listening to a low & clean bass was a good compensation for the effort.
But since there is no perfection, I started to hesitate that I chose not the right sub :)
The problem is that it is dual-voice-coil 2 ohm sub and since I hooked up it in series with the amp it goes with 4 ohm load and 300 Watt RMS. And I can't connect it in parallel cause it would mean 1 ohm load for amp which is not recommended.
It seems I should have chosen Alpine 1042D sub which I could connect in parallel and get 2 ohm load to the amp so it could drive 500 Watt RMS.
Guys, please tell me if I really made a big mistake.
Will I hear a significant difference if I replace my 1022D sub connected in series with 1042D connected in parallel? I am not much in getting streets blown, I just would like to get a nice clean bass with my setup and be sure I made it right.