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Was he right or was he being an idiot??
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<blockquote data-quote="Moble Enclosurs" data-source="post: 7419571" data-attributes="member: 634917"><p>It doesnt have to be exact, but matching is the best thing you can do for any setup for many many reasons. But If they do 3.6Ohm, then any amplifier capable of less than that should be fine without overloading them. Since the amp is 4Ohm, that is the best possible solution that he mentioned that I can tell. Keep in mind, which if you already know this, sorry to sound rude, but gain is NOT a volume control. So, after the system is tuned properly, these should not be touched again unless you switch for a different speaker, not the same one, but even then should be tuned everytime. The gain is likely the reason for the whine. Its feedback from the signal and needs to be adjusted properly.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Moble Enclosurs, post: 7419571, member: 634917"] It doesnt have to be exact, but matching is the best thing you can do for any setup for many many reasons. But If they do 3.6Ohm, then any amplifier capable of less than that should be fine without overloading them. Since the amp is 4Ohm, that is the best possible solution that he mentioned that I can tell. Keep in mind, which if you already know this, sorry to sound rude, but gain is NOT a volume control. So, after the system is tuned properly, these should not be touched again unless you switch for a different speaker, not the same one, but even then should be tuned everytime. The gain is likely the reason for the whine. Its feedback from the signal and needs to be adjusted properly. [/QUOTE]
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Was he right or was he being an idiot??
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