Know if you connect 8 ohms to an 8 ohm box in parallel that you get 4 ohms. We also know that you make 4 ohms to 4 ohms 2 ohms. Also that 16 ohms to 16 ohms in parallel makes 8 ohms. Our question then is: how many 16 ohm boxes can you connect in parallel to a 2 ohm amplifier. That is ?? boxes per channel (one amplifier has 2 channels).
Answer
Hello,
Many confuse impedance and resistance with each other. An impedance is the combination of resistance, capacitance and inductance. With a loudspeaker this is a special phenomenon, depending on the frequency this impedance can change. For example, you may measure 16 ohms, but the impedance can decrease to, for example, 4 ohms.
Second, the output impedance of 2 ohms for an amplifier means that this is the minimum allowed impedance that you can connect to the amplifier. If you connect a lower impedance, the amplifier will go into protection and the sound will be distorted.
So in principle you can connect many speakers to one channel, the amplifier will go into protection and the sound will distort.
The most ideal is that you always connect one suitable loudspeaker to one amplifier.
Secondly, if you connect 2 loudspeakers to one amplifier, you will hardly hear any difference in volume, because we only hear a sound increase at +3db, which is just equal to 2 loudspeakers in parallel.
Here a further explanation by a specialist amplifiers/speakers.
The indication “2 Ohms” on the amplifier is usually the “maximum allowable load”. Knowing that an impedance of a LS /should /supply/specify at 1kHz sine….and that you are talking about an impedance…that impedance will therefore vary in function of the frequency.
Answered by
ing. Rik Hostyn
Electronics ICT
Doorniksesteenweg 145 8500 Kortrijk
http://www.vives.be
.