I was not expecting such a professional tutorial from someone who looks so young. Crystal clear and concise. Excellent job, you have earned my subscription on this video alone simply because I came seeking knowledge and left feeling like I attended a lecture I paid for.
I really needed this video. I've saved it in my favorites, so that when I get to church I can review it and make sure all our equipment (mainly, my guitar amp to cabinet) is hooked up correctly. THANKS! - Jason
Your channel is underrated. For a noob like me with the "Audiophile" World, it's pure gold, thank you very much! Some amplifiers have banana plugs for both 8Ω and 4Ω. What if my speakers are 6Ω, should I plug them on the 4Ω or the 8Ω, or should I change my speakers? *suggestion* in regard to 1:30 - an example where the amplifier (or the speaker) could indeed get permanent damage would be nice, like a real world consideration beyond Ohm's law: with numbers (deltas or "comfort zone" above the nominal impedance+W). I guess that it would depend on how much voltage or current the different electronic parts are rated for? IDK, but can it be simply detected via the noise getting in as the volume rises up, just by hearing?... How can it actually happen in such context - no need to blow one of your own amp on camera for this, numbers would be sufficient (even though it could spice up your presentation 😉)?
My question is the effects of a crossover. I have 4 bookshelf speakers I wish to connect in series ( a stereo pair of two each). How will the crossovers affect the setup?
Great video. When bi-amping, would speaker impedance change? I suppose depending on the speakers, but those where the crossovers are separated, I suppose the effective impedance can be as much as halved? Say a hard to drive 2.8 ohm speaker can be more easily driven by bi-amping?
quick question, so if I have 2, 35 watt speakers @ 8ohm and run them in series. That means 70watts at 16ohms. Or is there another way to calculate watts is a series. trying to do home entertainment setup with an old stereo reciever.
I’m looking at having a 2x12 guitar amplifier cabinet built. The speakers I’m looking at are 60 watt speakers and are available in various ohms. The amplifier I’ll be using is a 25 watt amp that defaults to 8 ohms, but is switchable to either 4 or 16 ohms. Question, is there an advantage or disadvantage to having the speakers wired in either parallel or serial? I was thinking of setting it up to run two 8 ohm speakers and setting the amp to 4 ohm.
Hi there, thx for the knowledge sharing of this topic , I would like ask a question and get advise , if I got 6 ohm of passive loudspeaker, can I connect to the loudspeaker power amp which rated supported 8 ohms and 4 ohms ??? Thx
If 2 speaker on one channel and the first is a midrange 240 watt woofer thats 6.5 inches. Wired in series it is 8 ohms with no capacitor added. The second speaker is a 3" tweeter at 80 watts at wired off of speaker one in parallel with a capacitor of 2.2 uf at 250 volts. Tweeter is rated from 4 to 8 ohms. What will the impedence be and the total wattage per that channel.
Is it possible to calculate 2 speakers 4ohms each to match a 4ohms amp?.. sounds stupid but needed some advice.. wud I maybe add in additional speakers to meet the ohms rating on the amp?
Questions pls, I have a pair of 12s power loud speakers each 4 ohms. The amp is 2000 peak. Now can i replace those speakers with 8 ohms each .and by bringing those speakers trough out and in to the other one , does that causes less ,more or no chances because they r individuals power speakers.
My stereo amplifier has two sets of biding posts for each channel. The user manual says that it can drive a pair of 4 ohm speakers if only one set of the binding posts are being used. If I were to use both sets of binding posts, it can drive speakers that are between 8 ohm to 16 ohm. My speakers are rated at 4 ohm and they support bi-wiring. My question is that if I use both sets of the binding posts on my amplifier to bi-wire a pair of 4 ohm speakers, will it cause any issue/damage? Thanks. My amplifier's Power Output 200 W + 200 W (8 Ω) 400 W + 400 W (4 Ω) The speakers are rated at 4 ohm with 90db sensitivity.
I have a question about ohm matching for my guitar amp and my attenuator. I’m using a fender deville 4x10 amp, with 8 ohm speakers. I also have a tone king attenuator, which has the ability to adjust the omhs for the input coming from my amp and output going to the speakers. When I used a multimeter on the speakers, they read 2 ohms which makes me think the speakers are running in parallel 8/4=2. Since my attenuator output has 4,8, and 16 ohm settings, does that mean I need a 2 ohm setting to match the speakers properly? Or can I can get away with using the 4 ohm?
I’ve not noticed a difference in sound quality. However, I’ll admit that I don’t use parallel connections very often. Most often, I’ll be working with or designing a system that has a few cabinets in parallel.
Thank you very much,I'm a beginner in sound was wondering of you could make the same video on a live PA showing the series and parallel connections ,i get lost on the positive and negatives ,how do I know have done that correctly.
Hello, I enjoyed your video. Thank you, but i still seek your guidance. I have 4 JBL Control 1 Pro speakers. All 4 are rated 4ohms. My amplifier requires 8ohms speakers. I want all 4 of my JBLs to be controlled at the same time by my amplifier. What is the best way you recommend I cannot these 4 JBL Control 1 Pro speakers? Appreciate your guidance. Thanks.
Need a help here anyway to prevent my concerns!:D I have two cabinets: Marshall 1922 (unit impedance: 8Ω mono, 16Ω stereo) and Marshall Code 412 (unit impedance: 8Ω ) Can I connect my Marshall MG100HGFX (speaker min. 4Ω load) by just simply plugging these two cabinets into this amp (8+8) ?)
I have a question that I you can help me with.. I had 3 mtx FPR10 .35 OHM (they were sold in 3's). I sold 2. I just bought (2) 4ohm subs. Can the 3 be wire to work together?
So I’m running a 4-channel amp with two sets of coaxial speakers in parallel but my amp says it can run 100w RMS @ 4-ohm or 2ohm. I should still be ok, right?
Hi, does the amplifier impedance rating divided in left and right channel? I have an 8ohms rating amplifier and two 8ohms speaker. If i wire one to the right channel and another to left, will the speaker become 4ohms?
And did you found your answer? Cause that's almost the same question I have. What happens to the amount of watts depending on parallel or series connection?
The total power handling capacity of the circuit will increase with multiple speakers. To harness that power, you’ll need an amp powerful enough to provide it. The power capacity of each speaker will remain the same, but the impedance will have an effect on the power rating of the amplifier.
Most people use parallel to protect the amp and is better because each device receives the same amount of current but in total need least Current from the amp.
Hello, what happens if I run 16ohm speakers on an 4-8ohm rated amplifier? Does it mean that the speakers will receive less power from the amp in comparison, or are there other acoustical issues? Thanks
What little I know is that it would receive less power than what the amp is rated at and it is ok but never go with a speaker or combination of speakers that would reduce the impedance load to below the amplifier’s minimum impedance.
You can always go higher then rated on a solid state (modern) amplifier (tube amplifiers you cannot). You would get 1/2 the power then a 8 ohm speaker and 1/4 the power going to a 4 ohm speaker.
I have run 4ohm and 8ohm speakers in parallel (2.76 ohms) on my vintage pioneer sx1080 stereo for years without issue. The speaker output heatsinks get pretty warm so it does put strain on it being rated for 4 to 8 ohms. This only happens at extreme volume at power protect engaging levels. If you have enough high quality power it should be fine but ultimately not recommended. I just got a Hitachi sr2004 which is way more powerful but have decided to wire my speakers in series (12ohms) the Hitachi has a range of 4 to 16ohms. Now as for what order your speakers should be in. 4ohm before 8ohm firstly but, if you cut the 4ohm speakers power rating in half and it is lower than the power rating of the 8ohm speaker, you will then get better sound running the 8ohm speaker then 4ohm. Hope this helps 😁
So, how would one calculate the power required to drive a load with speakers that vary in nominal impedance, like the example with the 4-ohm & 8-ohm speaker in parallel?
There is a formula in electronics called the product over the sum for parallel circuits. The product meaning multiplying and the sum meaning adding. So if you have two different ohmic values involving two different speakers in parallel such as combining a 4 ohm speaker with an 8 ohm speaker for the amp output load the total is derived by multiplying 4 x 8 divided by 4 + 8 which equals 2.67 ohms. So 32 ohms divided by 12 ohms equals 2.67 ohms. Another rule of thumb is that in this situation the total ohmic load will always be less than the smallest ohmic value in the equation so 2.67 ohms is less than 4 ohms.
You can wire the 4 in parallel, which brings the total impedance to 2 ohms, then add a 2-ohm power resistor in series to bring the total impedance to 4 ohms. The 4-ohm amp should have a little range, and if so maybe a certain combination can work to give a close value to the 4 ohms, without adding any power resistor.
For resistance (R) in parallel the formula is as follows: 1/R=1/r1+1/r2+1/r3+ ... +1/rn So you get 1/R = 1/r1+1/r2 1/R = 1/4 ohms+1/8 ohms 1/R = 0.375 ohms R = 2.7 ohms
Or you could use the “product over the sum” method meaning multiply 4 x 8 = 32 then divide that amount by the sum meaning add the two values together (4 + 8 = 12) which would equal 2.66666 and after rounding up would be 2.7 ohms. Btw, when using this method you can already know that the result will be lower than the lowest ohmic value.
@@Trotter2320 I've been doing these calculations for decades and never even knew that method (product over sum) existed. Totally makes sense knowing math and fractions but I never put the 2 and 2 together. That is waaay faster (especially with just pencil and paper which is my preferred method of doing math, calculators is for sissies). Thanks for sharing that.
My brain don't work so well after Chemo so...can anyone help me with some old 15" Tube speakers that have different Olms ??? Please..? I have one that is 6 Olms and one that is 4 Olms what should I do? I have a Sansui AU-217 Amplifier...Rated 4 olms to 16 Olms I think... As of now I have (2) 8 olms speakers runnin parallel on each channel so that is ok....but wanna try the old tube speakers ..see how they run on it hahaha
I was not expecting such a professional tutorial from someone who looks so young. Crystal clear and concise. Excellent job, you have earned my subscription on this video alone simply because I came seeking knowledge and left feeling like I attended a lecture I paid for.
I really needed this video. I've saved it in my favorites, so that when I get to church I can review it and make sure all our equipment (mainly, my guitar amp to cabinet) is hooked up correctly. THANKS! - Jason
Same 🌹
Reached that age when I derive a lot of pleasure in learning from much younger folks. Thank you very much!
Thanks, veecee27!
Hehe, me too. Weird feeling
Best videos about the topic on the site hands down.
Thank you! I’m glad to hear that!
Your channel is underrated. For a noob like me with the "Audiophile" World, it's pure gold, thank you very much! Some amplifiers have banana plugs for both 8Ω and 4Ω. What if my speakers are 6Ω, should I plug them on the 4Ω or the 8Ω, or should I change my speakers?
*suggestion* in regard to 1:30 - an example where the amplifier (or the speaker) could indeed get permanent damage would be nice, like a real world consideration beyond Ohm's law: with numbers (deltas or "comfort zone" above the nominal impedance+W). I guess that it would depend on how much voltage or current the different electronic parts are rated for? IDK, but can it be simply detected via the noise getting in as the volume rises up, just by hearing?... How can it actually happen in such context - no need to blow one of your own amp on camera for this, numbers would be sufficient (even though it could spice up your presentation 😉)?
It is not recommended to mix speakers with different impedance on one channel. Bad bad idea. Always use identical speakers.
My question is the effects of a crossover. I have 4 bookshelf speakers I wish to connect in series ( a stereo pair of two each). How will the crossovers affect the setup?
I want to know that too. I already knew the basic concepts in this video (it hardly needs a 4 minute video for that).
Killer. Your videos are clear and to the point. I didn't know how series vs parallel impact total impedance. This is really helpful.
Thanks, Jaakko! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Simple question, yamaha yts sw90 6ohms driver can I change it with a new 8ohms driver? Do I need to do add or do something else??
I would really like to know the science behind why impedance halves itself when speakers are wired in parallel.
It's easier to go through two wires in parallel.
Great video. When bi-amping, would speaker impedance change? I suppose depending on the speakers, but those where the crossovers are separated, I suppose the effective impedance can be as much as halved? Say a hard to drive 2.8 ohm speaker can be more easily driven by bi-amping?
Thank you for this video
Thanks for watching!
quick question, so if I have 2, 35 watt speakers @ 8ohm and run them in series. That means 70watts at 16ohms. Or is there another way to calculate watts is a series. trying to do home entertainment setup with an old stereo reciever.
I’m looking at having a 2x12 guitar amplifier cabinet built. The speakers I’m looking at are 60 watt speakers and are available in various ohms. The amplifier I’ll be using is a 25 watt amp that defaults to 8 ohms, but is switchable to either 4 or 16 ohms.
Question, is there an advantage or disadvantage to having the speakers wired in either parallel or serial? I was thinking of setting it up to run two 8 ohm speakers and setting the amp to 4 ohm.
I think the first equation you showed at 3:51 is wrong but you corrected it in the next slide
Thanks. Good catch!
Hi there, thx for the knowledge sharing of this topic , I would like ask a question and get advise , if I got 6 ohm of passive loudspeaker, can I connect to the loudspeaker power amp which rated supported 8 ohms and 4 ohms ??? Thx
Thanks, and thanks again not using music next to your comfortably voice and teaching.
If 2 speaker on one channel and the first is a midrange 240 watt woofer thats 6.5 inches. Wired in series it is 8 ohms with no capacitor added. The second speaker is a 3" tweeter at 80 watts at wired off of speaker one in parallel with a capacitor of 2.2 uf at 250 volts. Tweeter is rated from 4 to 8 ohms. What will the impedence be and the total wattage per that channel.
Is it possible to calculate 2 speakers 4ohms each to match a 4ohms amp?.. sounds stupid but needed some advice.. wud I maybe add in additional speakers to meet the ohms rating on the amp?
Questions pls, I have a pair of 12s power loud speakers each 4 ohms. The amp is 2000 peak. Now can i replace those speakers with 8 ohms each .and by bringing those speakers trough out and in to the other one , does that causes less ,more or no chances because they r individuals power speakers.
Best way to wire 2- dual 4ohms 10" cvx.
2ohms or 8ohms? Series or parallel on a Sundown SIA 2500d amp?
My stereo amplifier has two sets of biding posts for each channel. The user manual says that it can drive a pair of 4 ohm speakers if only one set of the binding posts are being used. If I were to use both sets of binding posts, it can drive speakers that are between 8 ohm to 16 ohm. My speakers are rated at 4 ohm and they support bi-wiring. My question is that if I use both sets of the binding posts on my amplifier to bi-wire a pair of 4 ohm speakers, will it cause any issue/damage? Thanks.
My amplifier's Power Output
200 W + 200 W (8 Ω)
400 W + 400 W (4 Ω)
The speakers are rated at 4 ohm with 90db sensitivity.
I have a question about ohm matching for my guitar amp and my attenuator. I’m using a fender deville 4x10 amp, with 8 ohm speakers. I also have a tone king attenuator, which has the ability to adjust the omhs for the input coming from my amp and output going to the speakers. When I used a multimeter on the speakers, they read 2 ohms which makes me think the speakers are running in parallel 8/4=2. Since my attenuator output has 4,8, and 16 ohm settings, does that mean I need a 2 ohm setting to match the speakers properly? Or can I can get away with using the 4 ohm?
I thought you'd talk about the sound difference between in-serial and parallel setups. Or is it just no difference?
I’ve not noticed a difference in sound quality. However, I’ll admit that I don’t use parallel connections very often. Most often, I’ll be working with or designing a system that has a few cabinets in parallel.
Thank you very much,I'm a beginner in sound was wondering of you could make the same video on a live PA showing the series and parallel connections
,i get lost on the positive and negatives ,how do I know have done that correctly.
what is the voltage between terminals commom and 8 ohm?
Hello, I enjoyed your video. Thank you, but i still seek your guidance. I have 4 JBL Control 1 Pro speakers. All 4 are rated 4ohms. My amplifier requires 8ohms speakers. I want all 4 of my JBLs to be controlled at the same time by my amplifier. What is the best way you recommend I cannot these 4 JBL Control 1 Pro speakers? Appreciate your guidance. Thanks.
Need a help here anyway to prevent my concerns!:D
I have two cabinets: Marshall 1922 (unit impedance: 8Ω mono, 16Ω stereo) and Marshall Code 412 (unit impedance: 8Ω )
Can I connect my Marshall MG100HGFX (speaker min. 4Ω load) by just simply plugging these two cabinets into this amp (8+8) ?)
I have a question that I you can help me with.. I had 3 mtx FPR10 .35 OHM (they were sold in 3's). I sold 2. I just bought (2) 4ohm subs. Can the 3 be wire to work together?
So I’m running a 4-channel amp with two sets of coaxial speakers in parallel but my amp says it can run 100w RMS @ 4-ohm or 2ohm. I should still be ok, right?
Hi, does the amplifier impedance rating divided in left and right channel?
I have an 8ohms rating amplifier and two 8ohms speaker. If i wire one to the right channel and another to left, will the speaker become 4ohms?
No, the amplifier rating is for each channel separately.
Thanks!
As long as I’m in the correct range do I want a higher or lower impedence
If I have 2 speakers of 4 ohms of 100watts if I connect in series it will became 8 ohms and what will be the wattage it will be 100watts or 200 watts
And did you found your answer? Cause that's almost the same question I have.
What happens to the amount of watts depending on parallel or series connection?
The total power handling capacity of the circuit will increase with multiple speakers. To harness that power, you’ll need an amp powerful enough to provide it. The power capacity of each speaker will remain the same, but the impedance will have an effect on the power rating of the amplifier.
Most people use parallel to protect the amp and is better because each device receives the same amount of current but in total need least Current from the amp.
Can I pair a 50watt speaker with a 75 one? an the capacity would just add? 125?
Hello, what happens if I run 16ohm speakers on an 4-8ohm rated amplifier? Does it mean that the speakers will receive less power from the amp in comparison, or are there other acoustical issues? Thanks
What little I know is that it would receive less power than what the amp is rated at and it is ok but never go with a speaker or combination of speakers that would reduce the impedance load to below the amplifier’s minimum impedance.
You can always go higher then rated on a solid state (modern) amplifier (tube amplifiers you cannot). You would get 1/2 the power then a 8 ohm speaker and 1/4 the power going to a 4 ohm speaker.
I dont understand so much eng but i need to know who is the best for high bass parallel or series help
I have four 6 1/2 PRV 8ohm speakers, and 1 , 2 ohm amo how would i wire this
Thank you 💖
Thanks for watching!
Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it!
2 speaker connected series, each speaker watts 300 So, what is the total wattage?
🎯 thank you
I have a 4ohm and 8ohm speaker can I run them in parallel? I have a 2 channel amplifier the speakers are 6.5
I have run 4ohm and 8ohm speakers in parallel (2.76 ohms) on my vintage pioneer sx1080 stereo for years without issue. The speaker output heatsinks get pretty warm so it does put strain on it being rated for 4 to 8 ohms. This only happens at extreme volume at power protect engaging levels. If you have enough high quality power it should be fine but ultimately not recommended. I just got a Hitachi sr2004 which is way more powerful but have decided to wire my speakers in series (12ohms) the Hitachi has a range of 4 to 16ohms.
Now as for what order your speakers should be in. 4ohm before 8ohm firstly but, if you cut the 4ohm speakers power rating in half and it is lower than the power rating of the 8ohm speaker, you will then get better sound running the 8ohm speaker then 4ohm. Hope this helps 😁
So, how would one calculate the power required to drive a load with speakers that vary in nominal impedance, like the example with the 4-ohm & 8-ohm speaker in parallel?
There is a formula in electronics called the product over the sum for parallel circuits. The product meaning multiplying and the sum meaning adding. So if you have two different ohmic values involving two different speakers in parallel such as combining a 4 ohm speaker with an 8 ohm speaker for the amp output load the total is derived by multiplying 4 x 8 divided by 4 + 8 which equals 2.67 ohms. So 32 ohms divided by 12 ohms equals 2.67 ohms. Another rule of thumb is that in this situation the total ohmic load will always be less than the smallest ohmic value in the equation so 2.67 ohms is less than 4 ohms.
@@Trotter2320thanks!
What if you have daul voice 4Ohm speaker with 2 channel amp?
Awesome video bro.. good tutorial but I just wish I could have such equipments which I do love a lot..
Thanks!
hay... i have 4 high frequency drivers which haves 8 ohms impedance each.... so i wanted to run all of them on 4 ohms... how it can wired?? pls reply
You can wire the 4 in parallel, which brings the total impedance to 2 ohms, then add a 2-ohm power resistor in series to bring the total impedance to 4 ohms. The 4-ohm amp should have a little range, and if so maybe a certain combination can work to give a close value to the 4 ohms, without adding any power resistor.
why connecting 2 of 8ohm speaker equates to 16ohms? shouldnt the answer be 4ohms, instead of 16ohms?
Basically add them simply like you do with any other resistance in your physics class !
why would a 4ohm and 8ohm in parallel be 2.7 ohms instead of 3 ohms?
For resistance (R) in parallel the formula is as follows: 1/R=1/r1+1/r2+1/r3+ ... +1/rn
So you get
1/R = 1/r1+1/r2
1/R = 1/4 ohms+1/8 ohms
1/R = 0.375 ohms
R = 2.7 ohms
Or you could use the “product over the sum” method meaning multiply 4 x 8 = 32 then divide that amount by the sum meaning add the two values together (4 + 8 = 12) which would equal 2.66666 and after rounding up would be 2.7 ohms. Btw, when using this method you can already know that the result will be lower than the lowest ohmic value.
@@Trotter2320 I've been doing these calculations for decades and never even knew that method (product over sum) existed. Totally makes sense knowing math and fractions but I never put the 2 and 2 together. That is waaay faster (especially with just pencil and paper which is my preferred method of doing math, calculators is for sissies). Thanks for sharing that.
@@wally7856Thanks. Glad it was helpful.
My brain don't work so well after Chemo so...can anyone help me with some old 15" Tube speakers that have different Olms ??? Please..? I have one that is 6 Olms and one that is 4 Olms what should I do? I have a Sansui AU-217 Amplifier...Rated 4 olms to 16 Olms I think... As of now I have (2) 8 olms speakers runnin parallel on each channel so that is ok....but wanna try the old tube speakers ..see how they run on it hahaha
How to connect 2 amplifiers 350+250, 1 mixture 4 speakers 120*4=480,2 drive units 6 micks
Doesn't explain how a 2-way or a 3-way, etc. speaker enclosure maintains a nominal 8 ohm impedance.
☺️
I like that you're being technical to a degree, but you start at 30% and end at 70%. Where's the info for full comprehension ?
❤️❤️👍👍❤️❤️
I thought u had on makeup looked closer and realized its just handsome eyes...
And I also might be gay and a new sub
666th view right here, baby. woooooooo!
Not accurate at all if ypur talking about dual voice coil subs!!
Hello, what happens with the power usage, if i connect 2x 4ohm of 100W to get a 2 ohm resistance what happens with the wattage?
Thanks!