hardhitta47
10+ year member
CarAudio.com Elite
To keep it simple, the voice coils on your sub have a dc resistance, which is measured in Ohms. When wiring the subs, the voice coils could be thought of as individual resistors.
When resistors are wired in series, or head to tail, their values are added together. For instance, two 1 Ohm resistors in series is equal to 2 Ohms.
When resistors are wired in parallel, or head to head and tail to tail, and they all have equal resistance, you just take the value of one (in your case 4 Ohms) and divide by the number of resistors in parallel. (dual 4 Ohm vc's in parallel equals 2 Ohms, or 4 / 2 = 2 )
Your L7's voice coils are wired in parallel, so you could think of it as a single 2 Ohm load. If you think of it as a single 2 Ohm voice coil (think of it as a resistor), you could wire two subs in series or parallel. Again, series would be 2 + 2 = 4 Ohms. Parallel would be 2 / 2 = 1 Ohm.
To wire these like that, refer to JL's website or bcae1.com.
So anyways, you're looking for an amp that will do the amount of power you need at 1 Ohm or 4 Ohm. You'll have much more amp choices for your power at 1 Ohm. It's always nice to have some extra power above what you need, so I'd look for an amp that does around 2000 W @ 1 Ohm.
Hope you understood all of that. I tried to make it as simple as possible.
When resistors are wired in series, or head to tail, their values are added together. For instance, two 1 Ohm resistors in series is equal to 2 Ohms.
When resistors are wired in parallel, or head to head and tail to tail, and they all have equal resistance, you just take the value of one (in your case 4 Ohms) and divide by the number of resistors in parallel. (dual 4 Ohm vc's in parallel equals 2 Ohms, or 4 / 2 = 2 )
Your L7's voice coils are wired in parallel, so you could think of it as a single 2 Ohm load. If you think of it as a single 2 Ohm voice coil (think of it as a resistor), you could wire two subs in series or parallel. Again, series would be 2 + 2 = 4 Ohms. Parallel would be 2 / 2 = 1 Ohm.
To wire these like that, refer to JL's website or bcae1.com.
So anyways, you're looking for an amp that will do the amount of power you need at 1 Ohm or 4 Ohm. You'll have much more amp choices for your power at 1 Ohm. It's always nice to have some extra power above what you need, so I'd look for an amp that does around 2000 W @ 1 Ohm.
Hope you understood all of that. I tried to make it as simple as possible.