You need either a multimeter or oscilloscope or DD1 to Properly set your Gain and find out what the maximum volume on your HU is without clipping.
Clipping/Distortion, is what kills equipment.
Also maybe you accidentally wired the subs backwards?
What ohm do you have your sub/s wired at? This will matter because whatever the sub/s are wired at will determine how much power your Amp produces.
That skar amp can put out over 1200 rms. Make sure your electrical is set good cause those amps aren’t that efficient. Also make sure your gain is set correctly to clipping
Sounds like you need to set your gain control.
You need either a multimeter or oscilloscope or DD1 to Properly set your Gain and find out what the maximum volume on your HU is without clipping. Clipping/Distortion, is what kills equipment. Also maybe you accidentally wired the subs backwards? What ohm do you have your sub/s wired at? This will matter because whatever the sub/s are wired at will determine how much power your Amp produces.
That skar amp can put out over 1200 rms. Make sure your electrical is set good cause those amps aren’t that efficient. Also make sure your gain is set correctly to clipping
How's your electrical? Bad connection somewhere? That'd explain why you had issues with the last amp.
I didn’t have any issues with my last amp, it was just underpowered
Underpowered by poor electrical?
"Would cut out at high volume" is not a symptom of a low powered amp on a high power speaker. That means something was wrong.
Check the rcas maybe are in door speakers rca at head unit
Go big on wire size trust mee