Add together the Wattage of the subs. Eg: 200W each sub = 400W amp.
However, that's not the only thing to consider. You have to take into account the impedence(ohms) and how you're going to wire them.
Let's assume your subs are both rated at 200W and 4 ohms.
Wired in series you will need an amp capable of 400W @ 8 ohms.
Wired in parallel you will need an amp capable of 400W @ 2 ohms.
Those are two very different amps!
It's much easier to find an amp capable of working at 2 ohms than it is to find an amp that will work at 8 ohms and give you any kind of power.
Another thing to consider is(and this is my rule of thumb, not an absolute law that must be followed) that an amp, should be 30% more powerful than the speakers it is driving. So that 400W I mentioned at the begining shouldbe more like 500W.
If you take your speaker specs(Watts & Ohms) to your local dealer and tell him/her you want to wire them in parallel they can figure out what your power requirements are and help you pick a suitable amp.
Most preamps just have a mono output for a subwoofer. No real reason to run stereo for subs, unless maybe you are running two speaker boxes as subs. Most amps are switchable to mono mode and put out more power in mono. Hope this helps.
Not if subs are rated for 2000 watts each.
to mono if your amp will allow, also this is for single voice coil. otherwise run in mono parallel to run dual voice coils.
Depends if you are building heavy bass system with quite a few subs then a mono amp would be suggested but if it is just a single sub just for a standard bass upgrade then a 2 channel amp would be fine you can still use a mono amp on one sub just remember to take into perspective the RMS rating and the Impedance on both the Subs and the Amp
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.
That depends on the power ratings of the subs.
Depends on the rms or continuous rating of the amp and at what ohm is the amp stable
yes all u have to do is bridge them together
a hifonics mono with the same or more rms
yes
To power two subs rated at 700 watts RMS each, you'll need an amplifier that can deliver at least 1400 watts RMS total (700 watts RMS per sub). It's generally recommended to have an amp that provides a little more power than the combined RMS rating for headroom, so an amp rated around 1600 to 1800 watts RMS at the appropriate impedance (likely 2 ohms or 4 ohms, depending on how the subs are wired) would be ideal. Ensure the amp's output matches the impedance of your subs for optimal performance.
A bigger alternator.