i am bad with words...i understand how active/passive setups differ...in car audio, when we would wire two 4 ohm subs in parallel, it would give a two ohm load taht the amplifier would see....unless im doing taht wrong, its been so darn long...i am trying to figure out if home audio is the same...8 ohm tweeter in parallel with 8 ohm midrange lets the amp see a 4 ohm load? but you said it would see 8? how is this possible?
In car audio, you did this;
Amplifier -> 4 Ohm sub in parallel with another 4 Ohm sub = 2 Ohm load.
-- no passive crossover.
If you did this;
Amplifier -> passive crossover -> 4 Ohm sub in parallel with another 4 Ohm
sub = 2 Ohm load.
Both woofers are connected together in parallel.
You arn't doing this with tweeters. You are not paralleling tweeters with
midranges and woofers.
The amplifier is driving three seperate crossover sections that in turn drives
each speaker {tweeter, midrange, woofer}.
You have to remember that this is impedance, impedance changes with
frequency. Each driver can have a different impedance depending on
what frequency is playing. Effectively, you can assume the impedance to
be 8 Ohm when you make a loudspeaker with passive crossovers if the
tweeter, midrange and woofer is 8 Ohm nominal, but this 8 Ohm 'total'
impedance isn't written in stone either, it changes.
Even when you paralleled those two 4 Ohm woofers for 2 Ohm, that 2 Ohm
rating is still nominal, it will change also, could be higher or lower but can't
drop below the DC coil resistance of the woofer. So, if your 4 Ohm woofer is
3.2 ohms DC coil, two in parallel would be 1.6 Ohm load worse case when
you think it's really 2 Ohms. /hehe Could be higher, the box affects impedance
too. What if it's really 2.8 Ohm playing some frequency? You thought it's suppose
to be 2 Ohm.. /hehe
Suppose you made a 3 way loudspeaker using 16 Ohm tweeters, 8 Ohm
midranges and 1 Ohm woofers using a passive crossover. The amplifier will
get punished by that 1 Ohm woofer because impedance is very low. The other
drivers won't drain the amp by comparison.
What if you use a 1 Ohm tweeter, 8 Ohm midrange, and 16 Ohm woofer in a design? The amplifier wouldn't freak out as much as the 1 Ohm tweeter won't
consume alot of power like a 1 Ohm woofer can. Also, that 1 Ohm may not
be 1 Ohm as it is also dependent upon which frequency plays.
When you build loudspeakers you can use lower impedance tweeters as long
as you have a 'dumb' amplifier. Even lower impedance midranges are ok as it
won't thrash the amplifier. Woofers are hogs, you really punish an amplifier.
A dumb amplifier would be one with no protection circuit that may detect
a low impedance and turn off to protect itself... Even though the tweeter
won't cause the amp to overheat, the amplifier may not cooperate with you.
I prefer amps with no impedance detection circuits. Heat sensor is fine, if it gets
hot then turn off. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/laugh.gif.48439b2acf2cfca21620f01e7f77d1e4.gif