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Speaker wiring for low impedance
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<blockquote data-quote="n2audio" data-source="post: 8491843" data-attributes="member: 540940"><p>If you have education in electronics you should be capable of basic circuit analysis.</p><p></p><p>If you have 1.14 ohms and ~2500w at that impedance you have about 53v.</p><p></p><p>The 2 parallel with 8 parallel with 8 parallel with 8...</p><p></p><p>Parallel circuit so V is the same through all loads.</p><p></p><p>I = 53/2 and 53/8 which is 26.7 and 6.7</p><p></p><p>53 x 26.7 = 1415w through the 2 ohm load. 53 x 6.7 = 355w through the 8 ohm loads.</p><p></p><p>________________________________________________________________</p><p></p><p>The only way I know of to do different sub sizes correctly would be to have them only working in specific frequency ranges like -- big subs 50hz and down. Smaller subs 50-100. Component woofers 100+.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="n2audio, post: 8491843, member: 540940"] If you have education in electronics you should be capable of basic circuit analysis. If you have 1.14 ohms and ~2500w at that impedance you have about 53v. The 2 parallel with 8 parallel with 8 parallel with 8... Parallel circuit so V is the same through all loads. I = 53/2 and 53/8 which is 26.7 and 6.7 53 x 26.7 = 1415w through the 2 ohm load. 53 x 6.7 = 355w through the 8 ohm loads. ________________________________________________________________ The only way I know of to do different sub sizes correctly would be to have them only working in specific frequency ranges like -- big subs 50hz and down. Smaller subs 50-100. Component woofers 100+. [/QUOTE]
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Speaker wiring for low impedance
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