Great info that is much appreciated Sir. I have a 5 channel amp...8 inch sub...and four 4ohm coaxal speakers......I have my amp set to full....Should I set the 4 channels to HPF and about 85hz according to what my speaker specs can handle ( on the low end)?
The high pass filter frequency will depend on a couple of factors including the speaker diameter, the filter slope of the crossover in the amp, and your listening preferences. Start at 85Hz and adjust them up or down from there based on how they sound. You want to achieve the maximukm amount of bass reproduction without distortion at your highest listening volume levels.
Sounds like you want to power the components actively via their own channels? If so a 5-channel with suitable crossovers (or crossovers via and external processor) could power the components at sub while either the head unit's rear powered channels or a seperate 2-ch amp could power the rear fill.
Your amp should be equal to or slightly greater than the speakers that you are installing. If you're installing 40w rms speakers or less, then 40w rms at the amp (with the same ohm rating) will be sufficient.
Depends on your volume expectations and the cabin noise floor of the car itself. In a Tesla with average volume expectations, sure! In a street machine with open exhaust and loud volume expectations, probably not.
So long as their final combined impedance matches the lowest impedance the amp handles. So if you have a 5th channel that can do 1 ohm mono, two dual voice coil 4 ohm subs in parallel would match. You also want the power to match the subwoofer’s RMS.
It would have been nice to see a Memphis Vivbelle in this list for a little more power. I know the old school Belle amps were good
Great info that is much appreciated Sir.
I have a 5 channel amp...8 inch sub...and four 4ohm coaxal speakers......I have my amp set to full....Should I set the 4 channels to HPF and about 85hz according to what my speaker specs can handle ( on the low end)?
The high pass filter frequency will depend on a couple of factors including the speaker diameter, the filter slope of the crossover in the amp, and your listening preferences. Start at 85Hz and adjust them up or down from there based on how they sound. You want to achieve the maximukm amount of bass reproduction without distortion at your highest listening volume levels.
What would I need to power - 2 tweeters, 2 components , 2 coaxials, 1 10inch sub ??
I am setting up the same system, I need that answer as well
I’d PERSONALLY do 2 separate amps but the 6 channel works I guess
Sounds like you want to power the components actively via their own channels? If so a 5-channel with suitable crossovers (or crossovers via and external processor) could power the components at sub while either the head unit's rear powered channels or a seperate 2-ch amp could power the rear fill.
Hey is 40w rms x4+ 300w RMS X1 good enough. Not caring about sub dont need it to be higher than 300w . 40W rms good to run 6.5s and 6x9?
Your amp should be equal to or slightly greater than the speakers that you are installing. If you're installing 40w rms speakers or less, then 40w rms at the amp (with the same ohm rating) will be sufficient.
Depends on your volume expectations and the cabin noise floor of the car itself. In a Tesla with average volume expectations, sure! In a street machine with open exhaust and loud volume expectations, probably not.
When will the newest model Amps be released
We sell amplifiers as an when they are released be each individual supplier.
Can i run 2 subwoofers on a 5 channel amp?
So long as their final combined impedance matches the lowest impedance the amp handles. So if you have a 5th channel that can do 1 ohm mono, two dual voice coil 4 ohm subs in parallel would match. You also want the power to match the subwoofer’s RMS.
@@raysivacombined subwoofer RMS*
@@Omgkhii Indeed, hence the apostrophe S
1st comment ! Hey friend for the lesson. I have some kenwood 6x9 3 way x4 funny u recommend a kenwood amp