1) you do not need to put a switch in the power wire. and dont forget to use a ground the same size as the power wire.
2) you have the remote wire run to the amp from the head unit that turns it on and off. you can put a switch in it to turn in off when you do not want it.
3) get one GOOD ten. like soundsplinter, ascendant audio, addictive audio, digital designs audio, ETC. it is probably a 4ohm amp so go with a 4ohm sub, or if itll run 2ohm stable get a dual voice coil 4ohm sub and wire it in series IIRC to get it to 2ohm
Well, I'd much rather have a pair of okay tens than one good ten, because if it gets stolen the cheap tens are less of a loss than the good tens.
all you need to do is run power straight from the battery to an inline fuse. from there it goes straight to the battery. next youll need to ground that sucker. make sure you ground it to bare metal and make the ground as short as possible. then you connect the remote wire. it usually connects to the blue wire on your deck. it automatically turns on your amp when the headunit is powered. you might be able to turn the sub off through the deck if it has subwoofer controls.
post some specs of that amp and ill tell you what voice coil configurations you can look for to get the most out of that amp.
I wanted a switch put in so that I could turn the amp and subs off when I don't want bass, my HU lacks bass controls. I just want to know if it would be okay running it on the power wire, or if I should run it on the blue wire (forgot to include in the diagram).
Here's the specs from Walmart.
# Specifications:
* Output power (4 Ohm, <=1% THD): 125 Watts x 2
* Output power (4 Ohm bridged, <=1% THD): 380 Watts x 1
* Output power (2 Ohm, <=1% THD): 190 Watts x 2
* Signal to noise (1 Watt into 4 Ohms): 75 dBA
* Dynamic power (4 Ohm): 130 Watts
* Peak music power: 760 Watts
* Number of channels: 2
* Load impedance capability: 2~8 Ohm (Stereo); 4~8 Ohm (Bridged)
* Continuous power (4 ohm): 125W x 2
* Continuous power (2 ohm): 190W x 2
* Continuous power bridged (4 ohm): 380W x 1
* Frequency response: 10Hz ~ 50kHz
* Total harmonic distortion: 0.015%
* Signal-to-noise ratio: >95dB
* Dimensions: 11-13/16" x 2-3/8" x 13-1/8"
I'm buying cheap stuff from Walmart because I don't need a boom tomb, just some good base for my industrial/techno and occasional rap.