I’ll be needing a few assistance, I’m looking to power two subwoofers from a T-Amp with a 24v supply?
But I'm not quite sure how to match them up.
But the drivers might be the Eminence Kappalite 10" 8ohm 450wRMS...wired in parallel to bring them to 4ohms: link
(edit: I could use 4ohm drivers also...in parallel to make it 2ohms: link
I've been looking at the line of SureWondom amps link 1, link 2 but the figures for the amps are given in different voltage and ohms so much so that my maths-phobic brain starts to melt down!
I’ll appreciate your help
But I'm not quite sure how to match them up.
But the drivers might be the Eminence Kappalite 10" 8ohm 450wRMS...wired in parallel to bring them to 4ohms: link
(edit: I could use 4ohm drivers also...in parallel to make it 2ohms: link
I've been looking at the line of SureWondom amps link 1, link 2 but the figures for the amps are given in different voltage and ohms so much so that my maths-phobic brain starts to melt down!
I’ll appreciate your help
Your links didn't work. If the amp can supply the current needed for a 2 ohm load, you will certainly get more SPL that way.
A 24V supply is usually enough for most speakers, but maybe not subwoofers. Going with a 4 or 2 ohm load would help there, as long as the amp and power supply can do it.
A 24V supply is usually enough for most speakers, but maybe not subwoofers. Going with a 4 or 2 ohm load would help there, as long as the amp and power supply can do it.
This one goes down to 1.5 Ohms : https://store.sure-electronics.com/product/AA-AB31316
With 24V under 2 Ohms you'll get 144W RMS max per driver (count 2/3 of that at 1% distortion, which is enough for a sub). So you have with two drivers almost 300W (count on 150-200).
You should model your sub and check max excursion, very often the max RMS of the sub isn't the real limit, excursion at low frequency is. A properly designed sub with enough volume can reach high levels with not so much watts.
With 24V under 2 Ohms you'll get 144W RMS max per driver (count 2/3 of that at 1% distortion, which is enough for a sub). So you have with two drivers almost 300W (count on 150-200).
You should model your sub and check max excursion, very often the max RMS of the sub isn't the real limit, excursion at low frequency is. A properly designed sub with enough volume can reach high levels with not so much watts.
This board runs on 36V, which would give you 324W so more or less 200W / 1%This one goes down to 1.5 Ohms : https://store.sure-electronics.com/product/AA-AB31316
With 24V under 2 Ohms you'll get 144W RMS max (count 2/3 of that at 1% distortion, which is enough for a sub).
You should model your sub and check max excursion, very often the max RMS of the sub isn't the real limit, excursion at low frequency is. A properly designed sub with enough volume can reach high levels with not so much watts.