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Wiring, Electrical & Installation
Wiring subwoofers with different ohm voice coils together
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<blockquote data-quote="02WS6" data-source="post: 8691273" data-attributes="member: 678581"><p>You're still not getting it. Impedance is a measure of resistance for the voice coil not for the entire circuit which is why you can change final resistance it by wiring in series/parallel. Wiring changes what the amp sees not what each voice coil receives. Total circuit resistance is how you wire your speakers together to get a final matched resistance to whichever amplifier you're using. Internal impedance of each voice coil is how the speaker coil itself consumes the power. You cannot externally change this no matter how you wire it up.</p><p></p><p>Final resistance for the circuit is doubled to 1.3 ohms in your example (which will work for the amp) but this is what each voice coil see's in the circuit.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]19873[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="02WS6, post: 8691273, member: 678581"] You're still not getting it. Impedance is a measure of resistance for the voice coil not for the entire circuit which is why you can change final resistance it by wiring in series/parallel. Wiring changes what the amp sees not what each voice coil receives. Total circuit resistance is how you wire your speakers together to get a final matched resistance to whichever amplifier you're using. Internal impedance of each voice coil is how the speaker coil itself consumes the power. You cannot externally change this no matter how you wire it up. Final resistance for the circuit is doubled to 1.3 ohms in your example (which will work for the amp) but this is what each voice coil see's in the circuit. [ATTACH type="full" alt="19873"]19873[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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Wiring subwoofers with different ohm voice coils together
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