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it would have to be a 30 amp close to the battery
When buying an amp its best and safe to use the 1:1 ratio. That would mean if subs RMS was rated at 350 watts then get a 350 watt amp. Alot of installers will use 3:1 ratio because the subs max rated at 1200 watts so they say you will need a 1200 watt amp. But the truth is that sub may only peak a fraction of a millisecond. So unless your competing for a title championship there is no need to destroy you subs that you paid so much for.
6.5"
i have two 10" l7's and a kicker zx1200.1 and they beat. the rms on thus subs are only 600 so the kicker zx500.1 or the zx750.1 would be plenty for what u got.
427
You could go with a 600 watt 2 ch amp or a 300 watt mono block amp, depends on what OHM the subs are, if they are 8 ohm you could wire them down to 4 ohm or if they 4 ohm u could wire them to 2 ohm, i have a 600.1 Boss amp and subs are wired together at 2 ohm and they BANG.
That's too vague of a question. Sub woofers are sub woofers, and wiring them is all a matter of taking the time to do so. If you meant speakers, like the 16in. speakers custom fitted to some cars, that would be an entirely different story. However, sub woofers wire the same no matter the make. Just make sure you have the proper size amp and your good to go.
Comp/Control Panel/System- then look at ram.
kicker 10c124 12" 300W 4-Ohm SVC COMPVT Series Component Car Subwoofer Driver (Comp154) better known as 12inch kicker comp. it doesnt cost that much to be a kicker around $60. you can purches this speaker at onlinecarstereo.com or crutchfield.com. when this amp is bridged its 150rms watts and 300w witch is getting the peak proformace out of it. the ratings of it bridged is also what the speaker calls for. so when its matched together dont be afraid to turn up the settings to the max it will hold trust me. this is the set up i have and it sounds great.
Your General Contractors (or clients, if you go direct) may be liable for your Work Comp coverage if you don't carry it because many states are "ladder states." If you work with a GC, ask them if they can include you on their coverage and adjust your pay accordingly. If you carry your own Comp, you may find you can compete better for jobs. If you have employees, YES, please carry Comp - you're liable even if the law says you're exempt because of your company size or employee type.
im pretty sure its a 3.6 pulley
It depends on the model speaker. The speaker has an RMS amperage rating used for choosing the amp size needed. You would want to choose the upper number if there is a range. For example 50-200 rms watts, choose an amp with 200 watts. It is worse for the speaker to have too little than too many amps. Crutchfield even recommends 75%-150% of the RMS rating. You will also need to know the OHMs of the speaker when choosing the amp. There are sub woofers rating at 2 and other rated for 4 OHMS and have different amp requirements.