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<blockquote data-quote="bass_lover1" data-source="post: 3639852" data-attributes="member: 555256"><p>No, they wouldn't receive the same amount of power.</p><p></p><p>When you wire the 3 of them together to create a circuit, yes you will get an impedance load that the amp will see. However, the resistance of the coils will not change.</p><p></p><p>If you have two single 4 ohm coils, and a single 2 ohm coil, wired in parallel the amp will see a 1ohm circuit, but this does not change the impedance of the individual coils. Meaning, the coil with lower resistance will still receive more power, than the other two with a higher impedance coil.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bass_lover1, post: 3639852, member: 555256"] No, they wouldn't receive the same amount of power. When you wire the 3 of them together to create a circuit, yes you will get an impedance load that the amp will see. However, the resistance of the coils will not change. If you have two single 4 ohm coils, and a single 2 ohm coil, wired in parallel the amp will see a 1ohm circuit, but this does not change the impedance of the individual coils. Meaning, the coil with lower resistance will still receive more power, than the other two with a higher impedance coil. [/QUOTE]
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