Sunday, January 8, 2012

Kicker & H-Fonics?

I Plan On Buying 3 12'' Kicker 06CVX122 CompVX Series %26amp; The Peak Is 1500w %26amp; Rms Is 750w Since Im Buying 3 Its A Total Of 4500w Peak %26amp; 2250 Rms. Are Those Subs Good? Are They Loud? Dual 2 Ohms Or Dual 4 Ohms? Well Anyway Since The Rms Is 2250w Wont I Have 2 Buy A Monoblock That Has 2250 Rms Or More 2 Power My 3 Subs 2 The Max? Well Heres The Specs On The Sub %26amp; The Amp Please Tell Me If The Amp Is Just Enough %26amp; Good!





The Specs On Kicker 06CVX122 CompVX Series





Product Description:








12" CompVX Component Subwoofer


Inverted Structural Dome Polymineral Injection Molded Cone: Remains rigid, and lowers distortion


Rear Cone Brace: Offers unmatched strength and resistance to deformation


Ribbed Santoprene Surround for Linear Cone Motion


Silver-Coated Stamped Steel Basket


Stitched Surround: Ensures the cone and surround won't seperate, even under the highest loads


High-temp Polyimide Film Voice Coil Former


Dual Ultra-Length Voice Coils


Perimiter Venting


Sleeved High-Power Tinsel Lead Wires


Spring Loaded Nickel-Plated Terminals


Authorized Internet Dealer





Subwoofer Specifications:





Subwoofer Size 12"


Dual Voice Coil Yes


Impedance Dual 2 ohms


RMS Power Handling 750 watts


Peak Power Handling 1500 watts


Woofer Surround Santoprene rubber


Woofer Composition N/A


Sealed Box Volume 1.0 - 4.6 cubic feet


Ported Box Volume 1.75 - 2.25 cubic feet


Sensitivity 87.1 dB


Frequency Response 20 - 500 Hz


Xmax (millimeters) N/A


Top Mount Depth 6-5/8"


Cutout Diameter 11-1/8"


Warranty 1-year Manufacturer's


THIS IS THE END OF THE KICKER SUB BELOW IS THE MONO AMP AGAIN THIS IS THE END OF THE SUB NEXT UP AMP. P.S: WHICH SUB IS MOST RECOMMENDED FOR MONO AMPS DUAL 2OHM OR DUAL 4 OHM?HERES THE MONO AMP!Hifonics BXi2607D


Product Description:








Brutus Series 1-Channel Class D Car Amplifier


RMS Power Rating:


4 ohms: 850 watts x 1 chan.


2 ohms: 1700 watts x 1 chan.


1 ohm: 2600 watts x 1 chan.


Brutus Pulse Wave Modulated MOSFET EXVP (Exponential Vari-Power Supply)


Highly efficient Super D-Class amplifier circuitry with over-sized MOSFET Output


Dash-Mountable Bass Remote Control Included


LED power and protection indicators


Tuned Bass EQ (0-18 dB bass boost at 45)


Twin-Turbo Torroid Coil Design


HSMD Hifonics Surface Mount Design


Balance Line Inputs for 18-Volt line drivers


Preamp RCA output


DC, Short Circuit, Overload Protection Circuitry


Feature #6 example: Maximum Dynamic Headroom (MDH) power supply


Hifonics New Illuminated Heat-Sink Design With Blue LED Light Pumps


Gold-plated screw terminals


Variable low-pass filter (35-250 Hz, 24 dB/octave)


Subsonic Filter (24 dB at 15 Hz)


Frequency response: 2-250 Hz


2-gauge power and ground leads recommended. Contact us for information regarding a discount on a select amplifier kit when purchased together.


1-year Sonic Electronix warranty





Amplifier Specifications:





Amplifier Class D


Number of Channels 1 - Mono


RMS Power (4 ohms) 850 watts x 1 channel


RMS Power (2 ohms) 1700 watts x 1 channel


RMS Power (1 ohm) 2600 watts x 1 channel


Bridged RMS Power Not Bridgeable


Peak Power Output Not Specified


Minimum Impedance Unbridged 1 ohm


Minimum Impedance Bridged N/A


THD at Rated RMS Power .1%


Speaker Level Inputs No


Preamp Outputs Yes - 1 pair


Built-in Crossover Low-pass (LP)


High-Pass Crossover Frequency N/A


Low-Pass Crossover Frequency 35 - 250 Hz


Subsonic Filter 15 - 35 Hz


Signal-to-Noise Ratio 95 dB


Channel Separation N/A


Bass Boost 0 - 18 dB


Bass/Gain Remote Yes


Fan Cooled No


Fuse Rating N/A|||the brutus is no joke.. you will be deaf in a few short weeks|||yea those are good sounding subs. kicker stuff is always a good way to go. with 3 subwoofers with that amp your going to want the 2 ohm dvc subs not the 4 ohm ones. with the 2ohm subs you'll be wiring them to 1.34 ohm and with that amp its going to be close to that 2250 that you need. if you chose 4 ohm subs you could only get 2.67 ohms out of it and your amp couldnt power them well at that ohm. that amp should be perfect. and those subs are gonna pound|||sounds good but i have experience hooking up hifonics amps to kicker subs and here is the result


a couple years back a wanted to upgrade my 400watt RMS kicker amp so i bought a 1200watt RMS Brutus (did not really know about matching subs and amps or anything about stuff being CEA-compliant) and after everything was hooked up at the shop i noticed that they did not hit as hard (the Brutus amp was twice the physical size of the kicker amp) and thats when my friend told me about "CEA-2006 Compliant". that amps wattage is very over rated, if you get a kicker amp (or any amp that is CEA-compliant) you would be better off








CEA-2006 Compliant


On May 28, 2003, the Consumer Electronics Association published standard CEA-2006, "Testing %26amp; Measurement Methods for Mobile Audio Amplifiers." This "voluntary" standard advocates a uniform method for determining an amplifier's RMS power and signal-to-noise ratio. Using 14.4 volts, RMS watts are measured into a 4-ohm impedance load at 1 percent Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) plus noise, at a frequency range (for general purpose amplifiers) of 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. Signal-to-Noise ratio is measured in weighted absolute decibels (dBA) at a reference of 1 watt into 4 ohms. This applies to both external amplifiers and the amplifiers within in-dash receivers.





CEA-2006 allows consumers to be able to compare car amplifiers and receivers on an equal basis. Manufacturers who choose to abide by the new standard are able to stamp their products with the CEA-2006 logo that reads: "Amp Power Standard CEA-2006 Compliant."





here are the CEA-compliant brands (real power, not over rated)


Alpine


Bazooka


Blaupunkt


Clarion


Eclipse


Infinity


JBL


JL Audio


Kenwood


Kicker


MTX


Pioneer


Polk Audio


Rockford Fosgate


Sony

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