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Speaker wiring for low impedance
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<blockquote data-quote="dubstepper1000" data-source="post: 8491057" data-attributes="member: 664848"><p>You can do this, however, the speaker with the least about of impedance will have power than the others, making it much more louder than the other three. What you could do at your own risk is wire them all in parallel with each other, resulting in a final impedance of 0.5 ohms. The amp will be able to operate at this impedance but it won't be "stable" which just means that if you allow it to, it will push more power than it is made to push. As long as you are careful with how high you tune your gain knob, it shouldn't be a problem. Otherwise the speakers will not be balanced.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dubstepper1000, post: 8491057, member: 664848"] You can do this, however, the speaker with the least about of impedance will have power than the others, making it much more louder than the other three. What you could do at your own risk is wire them all in parallel with each other, resulting in a final impedance of 0.5 ohms. The amp will be able to operate at this impedance but it won't be "stable" which just means that if you allow it to, it will push more power than it is made to push. As long as you are careful with how high you tune your gain knob, it shouldn't be a problem. Otherwise the speakers will not be balanced. [/QUOTE]
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Speaker wiring for low impedance
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