...if I get two SR 124 DVC subs, wire them up in parallel to present a 2 ohm load and then wire the two DVC subs in a 2 ohm load up in series, they would present a 4 ohm load to an amp.
If I were to use this beast:
http://www.onlinecarstereo.com/CarAu...roductID=18038
# Signal to noise ratio > 115 db
# T.H.D. < 0.02%
# RMS Power @ 4 ohms: 2x480W
# RMS Power @ 2 ohms: 2x800W
# RMS Bridged Power @ 4 ohms: 1x1600W
# Damping Factor > 500
# Input sensitivity is 0.15 - 12.0
# Crossover slope 18dB
# Crossover Frequency 50-4k
# Dimensions: 9.5 x 2.3 x 21
It would run a 1600 watt load with roughly 400 watts per voicecoil.
That would end up being alot of good, clean, thump!
Of course I'd need to run a 200 amp alternator to handle that amp plus...say...this amp:
http://www.onlinecarstereo.com/CarAu...roductID=18039
# Signal to noise ratio > 115 db
# T.H.D. < 0.02%
# RMS Power @ 4 ohms: 4x70W
# RMS Power @ 2 ohms: 4x120W
# RMS Bridged Power @ 4 ohms: 2x240W
# Damping Factor > 500
# Input sensitivity is 0.15 - 12.0
# Crossover slope 18dB
# Crossover Frequency 50-4k
# Dimensions: 9.5 x 2.3 x 17.5
and bi-amp a set of SR6500 components.
That's alot of power and alot of draw. If the truck is going to have a high power ignition system plus all the other electronic gizmos associated with a high power engine, it's gonna need juice and tons of it. It'll have a kick-ass stereo though and I might be able to get back into competition with it again!




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