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Dsc 4125 2 ohm vs 4 ohm 6.5 components
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<blockquote data-quote="tommymilan311" data-source="post: 8427414" data-attributes="member: 664761"><p>I can't say that for sure. I'm still somewhat new.</p><p></p><p>Also, you could connect your front speakers to the front channels at 4-ohm and then connect your other speakers parallel at 2 ohm and utilize all 4 channels. Through brief research it looks like that'll be okay and is doable. And it'll solve your midbass problem to an extent. I personally don't think there would be a very big audible difference in mid bass from 4-ohm to 2. You'd be able to keep stereo and surround as a by product too, which never hurts. For equal sound you'r gain on the 2-ohm side would have to be lower than on the 4-ohm side.</p><p></p><p>Did you check your crossovers to make sure your not cutting midbass out?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tommymilan311, post: 8427414, member: 664761"] I can't say that for sure. I'm still somewhat new. Also, you could connect your front speakers to the front channels at 4-ohm and then connect your other speakers parallel at 2 ohm and utilize all 4 channels. Through brief research it looks like that'll be okay and is doable. And it'll solve your midbass problem to an extent. I personally don't think there would be a very big audible difference in mid bass from 4-ohm to 2. You'd be able to keep stereo and surround as a by product too, which never hurts. For equal sound you'r gain on the 2-ohm side would have to be lower than on the 4-ohm side. Did you check your crossovers to make sure your not cutting midbass out? [/QUOTE]
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Dsc 4125 2 ohm vs 4 ohm 6.5 components
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