Mark thanks for the eye opener, I feel like I'm in between a rock and a hard place, Chad just addressed the heat issue as if it were a normal thing, I can understand being warm but hot is another issue all together. I really don't know what to do at this point, the sub is over a year old, I was going to sell it but I have too much integrity to pawn this off to someone else. Any suggestions would be appreciated, thanks....
Jeff
Difficult question!
By the testimony here, there is something very wrong with the design of those Epik amps.
If the amps get warm on standby that proves the point. In a properly deigned Class D amp, the quiescent current should be close to zero. Efficiency should be 90% at least. The whole point of class D is that they are MOSFET switching amps, so they remain cool. They really have nothing in common with class A and A/B amps in their topography.
They are however very hard to design and for best results should be designed integral with the drivers. Best results are achieved with a design for a specific impedance curve.
My guess is that they are using generic amps, and the two woofer load is presenting an impedance the amps are not designed for.
In their advert they claim these amps run cool because of their class D design. That should be the case, but appears not to be with these subs.
To answer your question, you could remove the amp and block off the cut out hole and use an external amp.
With a spec of a 3.5 db point of 20 Hz I suspect that there must be some Eq starting at some point, probably in the neighborhood of 40 Hz. There should also be a subsonic filter at around 25 Hz. May be there is no subsonic filter to save money, which may be part of the problem, as impedance of sealed drivers usually drops significantly below the single impedance peak, and that may be compounding problems here, if a subsonic filter has been omitted.
I have to say I'm very underwhelmed by the design of most commercial sub offerings. Unless you go for the higher end, you should go DIY all the way with subs.