Depends on the sub. I wouldn't recommend this because of the impedance of your car stereo (depedig on your amp and set up) is normally 4 ohm and almost all house systems run at 8 ohm. Now what this means to you is that if you hook up your sub to your home stereo, you've just cut the resistance of the electricity in half, so you will get a lot more power out of your home amp, but with that comes the fact that with the increased power comes increased heat and you will either throw your home amp into thermal protect or just fry it completely. Plus some amps won't even work if the impedance is wrong. So I guess the short answer is, you can, but don't. Hope this helps.
Yu can hook subs up any where but to a stock the power output wont be much so they wont really hit
yes you can i have an amp and subs in my 2006 dodge 2500 HD
Use a line out converter spliced into the rear speaker wires to connect RCAs to a sub amp.
I have a 10" sub and an amp in my 2004 Chevy silverado. My dad got it for me but he also had to by a different stereo. I don't know if just the chevy stereo wouldn't work with it or if it's all stock stereos.
I need some help I gotta 2009 lancer and I wana pound hard need to know how too hook up subs and an amp up to my factory cd player its a indash six disk changer please let me know thanks
hook and ladder
my experience in stereo work you get the deepest bass with the subs facing the open trunk area
You first take the amp Then you take the subs. Then. Voila.
Type in google 'subwoofer wiring' and click on the 'crutchfield' link. Really good diagrams on how to connect dvc subs and svc subs to any amp.
have Best Buy do it!
Mono amp: hook up 2 wires to the positive speaker output, and 2 wires to the negative speaker output. Hook the positives up to the positive leads on the subs, and the negatives to the negatives. Stereo amp: one positive wire to each positive output on the amp, same with negative. Make sure you get corresponding positive and negative to each sub. Stereo amp running bridged (mono): It's normally the outter positive and negative leads, but refer to the manual. Wire same way as a mono amp, just use the bridge outputs. Mono or Bridged would be running 2 ohms if you are running single coil subs. Stereo would be 4 ohms. If you have a dual coil sub (such as Kicker Comp VR), you would want to run stereo because those subs run 2 ohm's stock do to the dual voice coils. Or 1 amp per sub unless you have a 1 ohm stable amp, which most likely you don't.
If you hook them up you get a lousy sound cos the gigga bites in each dont get no where. You the bass is wicked but does not last for long cos the subs create holes so obviously the subs do not work and you have to fork out more so just dont be stupid and do that to your car.