8 GA speaker wire? Man 12 GA is plenty, given it's actually 12......Right now I have my OA 15s wired together with I think 8 gauge or maybe even smaller wire. it's probably CCA too. Would going up to 4 gauge OFC make a difference on anything?
That's for current. Output is more voltage than current. Look at the wiring in your home.WIRE
Yes wire size for speakers has some effect based on what bcae says. Use the link above. At about 2000 watts you start to lose a very small amount of power on 14 gauge wire.
Are you saying you never drop in voltage in a home voltage of 120 vac? Idk, but turn on a 1200 watt (in home) device and monitor the drop in the 110-120 volt range, i bet it goes down just a bit...That's for current. Output is more voltage than current. Look at the wiring in your home.
I don't think you understood what I was saying. The output side of the amp puts out higher voltage and lower current. That higher voltage allows the small amount of current to pass very easily.Are you saying you never drop in voltage in a home voltage of 120 vac? Idk, but turn on a 1200 watt (in home) device and monitor the drop in the 110-120 volt range, i bet it goes down just a bit... True the OP might not be running 4000 watts on .5 ohms on 14 gauge wire, which the calculator says there may be audible loss, but others might be.
Just turned on my 1100 watt microwave and monitored drop, dropped 2 volts (122 volts to 120). whereas amp voltage can be 1.5-3 times lower, the drop would be even more. Apparently home wire gauge is 12-14. None the less, there is power loss. just like power in a home comes from a power source juxtapose it to a car audio situation. Amp is the source, and the speaker is like the microwave. but the microwave only uses a max amount of power, whereas the speaker "takes" what it is given.
A person with a multi sub build wired to
Maybe I am wrong, but in a multi thousand dollar build, I would rather get thicker wire and save some watts, rather than cheap out and lose watts to resistance because people say hundreds of watts are not enough to matter.
Not true. Especially with car audio and most especially with subs. Home audio at 8 ohms has higher voltages and low currents, but the sub amps we're using nowadays in car audio are low impedance and high current. The lower the load impedance, the higher the current and the more it matters what size wire we use.I don't think you understood what I was saying. The output side of the amp puts out higher voltage and lower current. That higher voltage allows the small amount of current to pass very easily.