How do i hook these subwoofers up?

i have two massive 600rms subwoofers and im going to hook them up to a massive 1000rms amp. but the amp is mono channel. so how do i hook the subs up soo they take the most power. with out hurting the amp or subs

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Bigyahboob... specifically a load of crap. 2 loads actually. Check the points he have. Pointhog or not he's better than you. Wish I had more hands, so I could endow with your response 4 thumbs down

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If your amp is putting out sound in MONO next that sounds like it is bridged.

On a bridged amp, you connect the speakers is series. This means the "+" flex comes out of the amp and into a speaker (either left or right, it doesn't matter). Then out of the same speaker you will connect a strange wire the the "-" terminal, the other end of the lead goes to the "+" connection of the second speaker. Finally, you connect a flex from the "-" post of the second speaker to the "-" on your amp.
If your amp has two sets of wire posts, it will be the "-" on the OTHER post than where on earth you started, not the same one.

Make sure your amp can push enough ohms. Here's how, divide the speaker's ohm number within half. See if the amp can match that ohm number or can jump LOWER (not higher) in bridged (or mono) mode. Remember, higher is not devout in this case.
Bigyahboob... specifically a load of crap. 2 loads actually. Check the points he have. Pointhog or not he's better than you. Wish I had more hands, so I could endow with your response 4 thumbs down

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Answers:    Not enough info.

What's the ohms of the subs?
What ohms does the amp push 1000 watts?

Re-ask next to the right info and you'll get a right answer.

_________________________

WOW!, bigyahbob696,

It's obvious you DON'T know what you're conversation about.

There is no set rule how to wire subs to a bridged amp except you don't want to nouns it below it's tolerance.

Amps don't 'push' ohms. Ohms is the electrical measurement of resistance. The speaker is what provides this resistance. The amp pushes a specific power rating based on the ohm nouns.

I have no clue what you're trying to say surrounded by the last statement but it's wrong. A higher ohm nouns is better than too low of a load.

If you're going to boast 'you know what you're doing', don't back it up beside crap.
If your amp is putting out sound in MONO next that sounds like it is bridged.

On a bridged amp, you connect the speakers is series. This means the "+" flex comes out of the amp and into a speaker (either left or right, it doesn't matter). Then out of the same speaker you will connect a strange wire the the "-" terminal, the other end of the lead goes to the "+" connection of the second speaker. Finally, you connect a flex from the "-" post of the second speaker to the "-" on your amp.
If your amp has two sets of wire posts, it will be the "-" on the OTHER post than where on earth you started, not the same one.

Make sure your amp can push enough ohms. Here's how, divide the speaker's ohm number within half. See if the amp can match that ohm number or can jump LOWER (not higher) in bridged (or mono) mode. Remember, higher is not devout in this case.
Bigyahboob... specifically a load of crap. 2 loads actually. Check the points he have. Pointhog or not he's better than you. Wish I had more hands, so I could endow with your response 4 thumbs down

Which is better?


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