General Discussion General discussion about all things car audio, from pioneer, orion, alpine and eclipse.

series vs parallel wiring.... is one better?

Old Jun 2, 2005 | 06:33 AM
  #1  
JordyO's Avatar
Thread Starter
4000 Watt CAFz'r
iTrader: (17)
 
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 6,363
Post

Is there really any difference between wiring your subs in series or parallel?

For example a dual 1 Ohm sub wired in series for 2 Ohms, vs a dual 4 wired for 2.

[img]graemlins/dunno.gif[/img]
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 06:48 AM
  #2  
Dann0's Avatar
500 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 587
Post

I dont know for a fact but I would think that a final 2 ohm load no matter which way you wire it will be no different in regards to your example.
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 08:33 AM
  #4  
BooLeaN's Avatar
500 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 819
Post

I agree with what DWVM said above. I don't know how much of a difference it all will make in the audio world but you can try to wire to subwoofers in series then press down on the one woofer. The other woofer should move in the opposite direction

Not exactly sure what that would mean in an SPL application but it's something to think about.
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 09:00 AM
  #5  
JordyO's Avatar
Thread Starter
4000 Watt CAFz'r
iTrader: (17)
 
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 6,363
Post

Originally posted by DWVW:
Parallel is better. Have you ever tried to trouble shoot a christmas light string that was wired in series? In a series wiring configuration every piece has an effect on the total chain, much more so than a parallel arrangement.
Ok.. so from a troubleshooting standpoint it's easier to wire in parallel.

But how about a performance standpoint?

I mean, having to find out wich sub is bad shouldn't be that hard because you'll have maybe 4 VC's to try and fix instead of 150 light bulbs.

Old Jun 2, 2005 | 09:22 AM
  #6  
sleboda's Avatar
50 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 117
Post

Originally posted by BooLeaN:
I agree with what DWVM said above. I don't know how much of a difference it all will make in the audio world but you can try to wire to subwoofers in series then press down on the one woofer. The other woofer should move in the opposite direction

Not exactly sure what that would mean in an SPL application but it's something to think about.
Are you talking about physically pressing down on one Subwoofer with your hand in a sealed box?
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 09:47 AM
  #7  
ShYYLO's Avatar
1000 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,093
Post

It shouldnt affect performance, its what the amps sees and what you are trying to achieve. Actually series is safer [img]smile.gif[/img] If one sub blows the other shuts off.
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 10:18 AM
  #8  
Dann0's Avatar
500 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 587
Post

Originally posted by JordyO:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by DWVW:
Parallel is better. Have you ever tried to trouble shoot a christmas light string that was wired in series? In a series wiring configuration every piece has an effect on the total chain, much more so than a parallel arrangement.
Ok.. so from a troubleshooting standpoint it's easier to wire in parallel.

But how about a performance standpoint?

I mean, having to find out wich sub is bad shouldn't be that hard because you'll have maybe 4 VC's to try and fix instead of 150 light bulbs.

</font>[/QUOTE]From a performance stand point, I can bet there will be no difference what so ever.

like ShYYLO said "It shouldnt affect performance, its what the amps sees". Thats the bottom line.

2 ohm is 2 ohm any way you look at it.
Old Jun 2, 2005 | 10:24 AM
  #10  
JordyO's Avatar
Thread Starter
4000 Watt CAFz'r
iTrader: (17)
 
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 6,363
Post

That's what I figured. Either way the coils are getting the same power.

I just though I heard it was better to wire in paralle.

Thanks for clearing it up though! [img]graemlins/thumb.gif[/img]

Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:47 PM.