Yes (depending on the deck, I doubt you'd actually get a full 22w out of it at 4ohms). .ok if my RECIEVER is rated @ 22 rms per channel and 50 watts peak X 4
is that rated @ 4 ohms?
In reality, probably not much more than that rated 22wif i hook up 2 ohm speakers like infinitys what would the power be?
Poof, there goes that magic smoke.Your headunit's amp may not even be stable into a 2ohm load per channel.
The older Pioneers were.I've never seen a HU that said it was stable into 2 ohm.
The older Pioneers were.
Hell, in the manual it had a diagram showing you how to bridge the rear two channels to a 4ohm subwoofer, providing a whooping 70w RMS of power.
Yes - because people that consider themselves true audiophiles will be greatly impressed by an install that (a) Is incredibly impractical and (b) sounds like hammered crap (as driving 28 speakers off of a headunit inevitably will regardless of whether or not you got the impendence shown to the deck's internal amp right or not)they may also be idiots... or the ohm loads on the tweeters may be higher, allowing you to bridge them in a way that it makes a 4 ohm load.. or they could know basic math and how to put the speakers in series of parallel loads so that it all comes out to 4 ohms... math on resistance is weird... but if you do it right, you get mad props from audiophiles around you... considering you successfully hooked up 28 speakers in your car off of a single 4 channel head unit... lol theres a calculator online that shows how to put speakers in parallel and in series and you put in the ohm loads and it spits a number at you... search google for it... hell i even did it for you... go here http://caraudio.biggz.com/downloads/ohmcalculator.html and download that program... youll be happy... youre welcome