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Safe to underpower?
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<blockquote data-quote="brynm" data-source="post: 7714941" data-attributes="member: 566714"><p>Yes, a 150w 2ohm speaker.</p><p></p><p>As said, as long as you are sending a clean signal there is no way at all you can wreck a speaker by sending it less than the speaker was designed to handle in the situation. Think of it this way, if a speaker was wrecked when it was fed too little power what would happen when you turned your volume down? The problem comes from someone saying "I should be able to get more out of this speaker, I'll just turn the gains or bass boost right up" which ends up sending a clipped signal to the speaker.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="brynm, post: 7714941, member: 566714"] Yes, a 150w 2ohm speaker. As said, as long as you are sending a clean signal there is no way at all you can wreck a speaker by sending it less than the speaker was designed to handle in the situation. Think of it this way, if a speaker was wrecked when it was fed too little power what would happen when you turned your volume down? The problem comes from someone saying "I should be able to get more out of this speaker, I'll just turn the gains or bass boost right up" which ends up sending a clipped signal to the speaker. [/QUOTE]
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