SpidersWeb wrote:Also RMS is a reasonable way to distinguish the power of a speaker when you have nothing else to really go by
A speaker's wattage rating has nothing to do with the 'power of the speaker', but the power handling. Why is this important? It generally isnt, especially when you're not taking into account the speakers sensitivity, but we're getting beyond the scope of this topic.
SpidersWeb wrote:DD - Digital Designs seems to be very popular here lately, especially the subs, but Ive seen many recommend the 6.5 splits. Also Infinity Reference splits (~$250 new) I have seen many good words, and Apline Type-S.
DD make extremely goos subs, but I'm not big on their speakers. They go loud, but the sound quality can be beaten in the same price range.
SpidersWeb wrote:Im pondering some Fusion front splits. Active crossovers and what looks like a very grunt 6.5 mid-bass :) But I haven't heard them yet, so dunno.
They're not active crossovers - they're passive. Fusion are OK, but I'd look more for Infinity, Boston, etc in the same price range. I know this from experience - I'm currently running fusion fronts, and I'm not all that happy with them.
StazzyBabyYeah wrote:I'm interested in some pioneer 80watt rms 6x9's and amp that will have at least there rms rating if not more (higher input wont cause problems will it?)
That will be fine - you're MUCH better off overpowering then underpowering. That's what I would do.