Posted January 9, 200916 yr I am thinking of dropping my two 8W7's for one IDQ12. If it's a 2ohm sub, can I use one of my 125.2 to power it? How would it hold up (and how much power) bridged at 2 ohm?
January 9, 200916 yr Rated power output ----RMS power, 4 ohm stereo 125W x 2CH ----RMS power, 2 ohm stereo 200W x 2CH ----RMS power, 4 ohm bridged 400W x 1CH
January 9, 200916 yr If it's a dual 4ohm sub you could run one 125.2 bridged per coil. Not the best thing in the world but it is an option.If you did that it would give you about 400 watts per coil.
January 9, 200916 yr Nope - not designed for it.You might be surprised at what it will do bridged @ 8 ohms if you have D4 coils to wire it as such.
January 9, 200916 yr What if you measured impedance rise through out the entire frequency range that you would play the sub and it is above 4 ohms? could you then run a 2 ohm dcr subwoofer on the amp?
January 9, 200916 yr Same answer. You're still going to drop below that 2 ohm load at certain frequencies, and even running at 2 ohms for too long is going to kill it.Run the amp where the manufacturer suggests you run it.
January 10, 200916 yr Author Well, in the next month or so I'm going to pick up a Image Dynamics IDQ 12". The real question is should I get a D2 and run it at 4 ohm with a 125.2 ... or... get a D4 and run it at 2 ohm, then pick up a 1200D.Hmmm... then I'd have to give away two practically new 125.2 amps! What a waste.
January 10, 200916 yr Looks like you have your answer then. If you don't want to get rid of the 125.2's get the DVC2 IDQ.
January 10, 200916 yr If having impedance increases made it ok on the amp, don't you think the amp manufacturer would rate the amplifier lower? Such as- it's really a 2 ohm stable amp, but we'll rate it at 1 ohm because the impedance will be higher when they actually put speakers on it. No.And why not run both amps to one sub? Wire one amp to each voice coil. it's unconventional but there's nothing wrong with it.
January 10, 200916 yr And why not run both amps to one sub? Wire one amp to each voice coil. it's unconventional but there's nothing wrong with it.I have seen this done with the 100.2 and it worked out pretty good. I think it is your best bet with what you have now as long as you gain match the amps Edited January 10, 200916 yr by AlpineAndy
January 10, 200916 yr Author If having impedance increases made it ok on the amp, don't you think the amp manufacturer would rate the amplifier lower? Such as- it's really a 2 ohm stable amp, but we'll rate it at 1 ohm because the impedance will be higher when they actually put speakers on it. No.And why not run both amps to one sub? Wire one amp to each voice coil. it's unconventional but there's nothing wrong with it.Well, I only want two amps total. You can see my current install here.Amp rack is double stacked. Ugh. So for trunk saving space, I want one sub and a smaller enclosure than what I already have. 400w is plenty of power for a IDQ12, but I'm sure it'll sound better with 600w. Actually, I'd rather only have one amp. But I don't know much about the 5 channels. How's the Helix Deep Blue? Or the Audison VRX6 Direct 2?