Curiosity inspired me to take apart my Z-2300 subwoofer. The grill pried off without much difficulty, and I was even able to reassemble it with minimal cosmetic damage.
WARNING: Perform this disassembly with extreme caution! The enclosure contains a 120V AC transformer. With the Z-2300 turned on, unplug the power cord and wait for the power LED to fade. This will drain the capacitors and minimize the possibility of shock.
Various facts discovered:
- Subwoofer uses an 8 screw mounting pattern
- Subwoofer impedance measured at DC: Single voice coil, 6.5 ohms (8 ohms as per specs)
- The amplifier had no problem driving an external 4 ohm subwoofer in a separate enclosure.
- Subwoofer construction: Corrugated paper and foam surround.
- Logitech Model #: W200OF120-02F
OEM: Tang Band W8-670Q
- Logitech Model #: W200OF120-02F
- The Z-2300 uses a JRC4565 operational amplifier for pre-amplification and an unidentified chip amp for output amplification
- EDIT: Satellites and subwoofer use TDA7296 and/or TDA7295 Class AB amplifier IC’s (identified by judeh101)
Potential modifications:
- As others have done, the enclosure could use some sound dampening material.
- Replacing the subwoofer with a better made 8″ woofer (polypropylene cone and rubber surrounds) would probably improve sound quality. The amp can handle 4 ohms (based on my limited testing), which means output might even be stronger with such a woofer. However, the amplifier’s 150Hz crossover is fairly high and should ideally be reduced to below 100Hz. If I get around to replacing the sub, I’ll figure out the amplifier circuitry and post that modification.








Just pry the woofer out after the screws are removed. There is some gasketing that the woofer sticks to, but it should pry free pretty easily.
I just disassembled mine and hooked the amp up to a kicker 12″ competition sub in a ported box. WOW! does this guy slam.