run my rsd 600.1 at 1 ohm?
run my rsd 600.1 at 1 ohm?
subject says all...do able?
- dedlyjedly
- Silent but Dedly
- Posts: 1212
- Joined: Thu Dec 07, 2006 7:03 pm
- Location: Las Vegas
- dedlyjedly
- Silent but Dedly
- Posts: 1212
- Joined: Thu Dec 07, 2006 7:03 pm
- Location: Las Vegas
Why would that be "gay"?dkitt10 wrote:worse cause ill run it at 4 but that's gay if perhaps the rsd could be stable at 1
First of all, you probably can't hear the difference between 425 watts and 650. The difference of 225 watts will amount to a ~1.5 decibel difference. At 4 ohms the woofer will be much more controlled, your amp and power system will be less stressed, so it will be more reliable and likely louder for transient notes.
At 1 ohm your amp will be stressed out, you will have to reduce the gains drastically to get it to perform without clipping, thermaling, or overloading. Your electrical system will be stressed... this means more flashing lights, and generally worse sound quality.
Try both, pick whichever one sounds best. Make sure you gain match them to approximately the same volume... if at 1 ohm it is substantially "louder", odds are you are clipping the hell out of your amplifier, which will cause it and your subwoofer to fail in short order.
No, it won't produce more power at 1 ohms than it will at 2. It will TRY to, but the amp will have to cut it back and regulate itself to keep it from blowing up. This is why you get added current draw and heat, but not power, from running at 1 ohm.dkitt10 wrote:i figured id be over 1000 watts at 1 ohm...which i figured would be quite the difference over 425 watts...this isnt my dd
i use the 600 on my rsd 12 in a 1.8 sealed for DD
The difference between 1000 and 425 watts is shy over 3 decibels. The rule of thumb is that every time you double your power or cone area, you gain 3 decibels. Double both and you get 6.