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<blockquote data-quote="Doxquzme" data-source="post: 8853630" data-attributes="member: 689267"><p>Parallel at the amp is the same as parallel at the speaker then to the amp. Just like parallel off of a single subwoofer driver with two voice coils in parallel then one wire to the amp, all the same. Once it’s parallel, it’s one lead to the amp and seen as the sum of the two. Remember, any load in parallel is going to be lower than the lowest in the circuit. An 8 ohm and 1 ohm in parallel is only a .88 ohm load. That’s often too low for most amplifiers to handle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Doxquzme, post: 8853630, member: 689267"] Parallel at the amp is the same as parallel at the speaker then to the amp. Just like parallel off of a single subwoofer driver with two voice coils in parallel then one wire to the amp, all the same. Once it’s parallel, it’s one lead to the amp and seen as the sum of the two. Remember, any load in parallel is going to be lower than the lowest in the circuit. An 8 ohm and 1 ohm in parallel is only a .88 ohm load. That’s often too low for most amplifiers to handle. [/QUOTE]
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