I'm a little confused about amp wiring. Say I have a SVC 4 ohm driver bridged mono (+ of one channel and - of the other). What resistance load does the amp 'see'? Say the amp has a stated power output of 100 watts per channel RMS. In a bridged mono configuration, what does the output become? Also, if there is a bridged mono, is there a bridged stereo? Sorry about the rambling, I'm just trying to figure this Ohm's law thing out. Thanks in advance.
Actual Ohm's Law is more complicated than that. Bridged stereo amp to mono at 4 ohm the amp sees total of 4 ohms or 2 ohms per channel. Bridging combines power of both channels into one. If stated 100watts rms per channel at 4 ohms than it is 200 watts bridged at 8 ohms. If 200 watts rms per channel at 2 ohms than bridged at 4 it is 400 watts rms. Correct if i'm wrong anyone.
Works for me! One more thing I would like to add, when discussing Bridged and Mono. Mono is essentially the summed left and right stereo signals combined into one, ie, no stereo effect. Bridged is the actual using of two channels of an amp combined into one, which in effect creates a mono signal or output if you will, example, left outputs section of the amp pushes the speaker, the right outputs of the amp pull the speaker..... But when discussing amps and running them mono, or bridged, it pretty means the same thing in most mobile audio circles.