- Thread starter
- #1
I've just installed a Kicker 400.1 amp and have to make some choices.
At 4 ohms, the Kicker amp will put out 150 watts per channel. That "per channel" is what's killing me. At first I split the audio signal and was running four wires from the amp to the dual voice coils, two per channel/coil, so 4 ohms per channel. BUT my speaker, the CompRT 6.75", says it can only handle 150 watts TOTAL power. Not per channel.
If I go with a single channel and wire the 4 ohm Kicker in parallel, this results in a 2 ohm load. With my amp, that's 300 watts and I've killed my speaker.
If I go with a single channel and wire the 4 ohm Kicker in series, this results in an 8 ohm load. With my amp, that's 75 watts and I've killed volume.
So the question is, should I go with a 2 ohm Kicker speaker in series? This would be a 4 ohm load, hitting 150 watts and the recommended power for my speaker.
I happen to have a 2 ohm Kicker on hand, but didn't want to do this if my assumptions are wrong. Please check me on these? Thank you all!!
At 4 ohms, the Kicker amp will put out 150 watts per channel. That "per channel" is what's killing me. At first I split the audio signal and was running four wires from the amp to the dual voice coils, two per channel/coil, so 4 ohms per channel. BUT my speaker, the CompRT 6.75", says it can only handle 150 watts TOTAL power. Not per channel.
If I go with a single channel and wire the 4 ohm Kicker in parallel, this results in a 2 ohm load. With my amp, that's 300 watts and I've killed my speaker.
If I go with a single channel and wire the 4 ohm Kicker in series, this results in an 8 ohm load. With my amp, that's 75 watts and I've killed volume.
So the question is, should I go with a 2 ohm Kicker speaker in series? This would be a 4 ohm load, hitting 150 watts and the recommended power for my speaker.
I happen to have a 2 ohm Kicker on hand, but didn't want to do this if my assumptions are wrong. Please check me on these? Thank you all!!
Sponsored