hook both pos on one side and both neg on tha other
Yes you can bridge this amplifier to a 2 channel at 4 ohm per channel for 200 watts out of each channel.
It combines two channels into one channel making the output for the speakers/sub woofers more powerful. But it is only good to bridge an amplifier if you know the amp is good quality because if its not, it will mess up the amplifier soon.
A mono amplifier. You need two for stereo.
A bridgeable amplifier is a two channel amp where the two sections can be combined and used as a single channel amp with much higher (usually around double) power output. There will be a switch or jumper that enables the bridge. Only one of the two inputs are used. The output is taken from the two positive terminals, one from each channel. The negative or common output terminals are not used. A bridged amp fed from an electronic crossover is used a lot to feed a high-powered sub.
Bridging two amplifier channels is a way of delivering more power to a single speaker. A two channel amplifier might have a power output of 100W per channel. By linking them together, the power output to the single speaker can increase to 200W. It's not always quite that simple. If the amplifier can be bridged, it will say so in the manual and it will show the connections that need to be used. Trying to bridge an amplifier that is unsuitable is a sure fire way of killing the amplifier and perhaps the speaker itself. There are certainly methods that can be used to bridge amplifier channels even if the manufacturer does not offer the facility. To do so needs an intimate knowledge of the electronics used in the amplifier. The fact that this question is being asked indicates that the required knowledge isn't there right now. Much safer to obtain an amplifier that is rated and approved for bridged loads than risk the unpleasant results of getting it wrong.
It could be a 2 channel stereo amplifier.
An Audio source amp310 is a direct two channel amplifier. It runs off of hundred and fifty power watts and has two channel output transformer less direct coupled idge type amplifier.
The instrumentation amplifier provides isolation, and gain to the output of the Wheatstone Bridge. It is placed before filtering because the low output of the gauges would suffer from induced noise in the filter circuit if left unamplified.
A 2 channel aplifier is an amplifier that can operate two channels. It is basically two 1-channel amplifiers in a single box. This unit is usually intended for operating a left speaker and a right speaker. A channel is the signal/power combination intended for one specific speaker. A 'Stereo' audio system typically has a left channel and a right channel. More advanced audio systems may have separate channels for different types of speakers (midrange, woofer, tweeter, very commonly subwoofer, sometimes supertweeter) or for rear channels (surround.) This sort of setup was modern during the early 90s. A bridged 2 channel amplifier is constructed in such a way that the amplifiers can be set up to operate inline providing the effect of a more powerful one-channel amplifier. If durability is a concern, a bridgeable two channel amplifier used for two channels tends to work well because it's likely to have higher quality or just more diodes so as not to be destroyed too quickly during bridged operation. Using a more powerful amplifier with the gain turned down is also a good idea if longevity is a concern.
The Rockford Fosgate R150-2 2-channel amp puts out 50 watts RMS per channel to your speaker system, or you can bridge it to supply 150 watts RMS to a subwoofer.
East Channel Bridge was created in 1940.
North Channel Bridge was created in 1997.