well, you set up your power, remote, and ground wire. Then you need to run your RCA cables to the back of your head unit. After that, you just connect your speakers to the amp and your done.-Shocker
I have, I have even used the output for the input of the same amp, so that you only run one RCA cable to the amp, then run the output back to the other input, and it runs 4 channels.. :o)
If you want to run both coils,you have to wire the positive to positive and negative to negative on your sub,then run a wire from each plug to the amp. Positive to the positive side of the amp and negative to negative side of the amp,(you can run in bridge mode or stereo if your amp can handle the load)
To run a monitor speaker or to connect several amps in series to pre-amp your amp.
Yes, no problem whatsoever.
take a red power wire run it from the positive side of the battery to the amp. Take a yellow wire run it from the amp to the fuse panel and tie it in to the radio fuse. Then run your jacks from the radio to the amp and speaker wires from radio to amp.
The majority of the circuits in your home are run on 15 amp circuits.
jl audio 500/1
to mono if your amp will allow, also this is for single voice coil. otherwise run in mono parallel to run dual voice coils.
Do you mean the main power from the battery or the remote turn on? If you mean the battery power, usually amp add on kits come with distributor blocks. You make one run of power wire from the battery to somewhere close to your amps. Then, hook that wire to the block, and run a new piece of wire from the block to each amp. If you mean the turn on lead, just make one run from the head unit to the first amp, and then run another piece from the first amp to the second.
In the United States, there isn't a hard limit on how many 20 amp circuits that can be run on a 50 amp supply. This is because in most cases, especially in homes, we don't load most circuits with more than an amp or 2, even when they are protected by a 20 amp breaker. From a practical perspective you probably have a limited number of slots for breakers in your service or supply panel.
no
Run your power, ground, and remote wires. Then connect your RCAs to the back of your CD player and your amp, then connect your speakers to the amp..-Shocker