chuyler1 said:
750 != 1600
With that out of the way, my last setup had 250watts RMS per channel for my front stage...I know what high-power can do. However, the 12" sub was only getting 400watts. The midbass covered any intensity that may have been lost in the bass.
However, once you break 1000watts total output you start running into electrical current problems...I'm sure if you had an ambulance alternator in your P5 that wouldn't be a problem, but for most realistic systems it is. A capacitor does you no good if your system is sucking down more current than your alternator can generate.
I would rather spend my money on more surface area, sound deadening, and high quality components throughout the install than blow it on a 1600 watt sub, a 1600 watt amp to power it, an alternator, a capacitor, and a battery.
i've been running several thousand watts through my system since day 3 of owning my 1.6L '99 with no problems

still have stock alternator, and a $40 battery from walmart

the red top battery i had died when the battery in the trunk ****** up from the vibration. it only lasted 2 weeks

no capacitor, no batcap, nothing more than an upgraded battery and proper wiring, and no problems
NetGuy, ever heard of mark antony amps? specifically the mk25opcm. it's a new generation of cheater amps that is rated at 25 watts into 4 ohm, USACI rated at 70 watts, but puts out over 2500 into .5 ohm, at 12.9 volts

it'll do even more at 16 volts. you ran 6 subs, and what ohm load were you running, since the amp might be rated at 100 watt at 4 ohm, but can put out well over that at a lower load. especially if it was unregulated

my old autotek 330mxi was rated at 165x2 at 4 ohm, but bridged at 1 ohm would put out over 2k watts, and that's an 8 year old amp

and while 148 dB is impressive with low power, you did needed six 12's to achieve it. my goal is over 150 dB with a single 10
