Why does my amp run bridgged when its 2 ohm stable and speakers are already at 2 ohms ?

I have a boss amp and a mtx running seperatly to own wires, 2 kits. They both arebridgged , one 10 inch on one and 2 on the other and both are final ohms of 2. So how does this work if bridgging a amp half's the ohms ?

Some say it does cut in half some say no. I say how would mine even go on if only 2 ohm stable if it was true, then 1 ohm at amp it would be. My amps or not great, so I bet if I load it at one ohm on subs they won't play proving bridge an amp don't cut ohms in half.

Just basically wanna understand why pro installers say yes and some say no and understand why my crap amps run if it is true.

Also I do wanna be safe, I feel them after 30 min of playing and barley warm also.

I do appreciate the feedback from everyone.

Anonymous2016-01-06T10:44:11Z

Son, get rid of the boss amp. Boss is nothing but junk. Stop buying cheap equipment and spend more money on something better. But 3 10's on a boss amp isn't going to impress me.

My old setup was a single DC Audio XL 15 on a Soundqubed amp. I can't remember which model the amp was. I had the sub inside of a huge custom ported box. It was loud that my whole neighbors and everybody down my block could hear it.

When I was a teen, I was just like you. Driving down the block with loud bass annoying my neighbors and people in traffic. Because I love the attention that I got and I also love seeing how people will react to it.

An amplifier can only handle 4 ohms while being bridged..not 2 ohms.

KaeZoo2016-01-06T10:45:48Z

If you want a useful answer, include the model numbers of the amplifiers. There are lots of Boss amps. There are lots of MTX amps. Tell us which ones you have.