Ok here's the deal,
I've got two component sets & two 6x9's for my car, each is rated at 4 ohms. I'm looking for a 4 ch. amp right now but I want to be able to run my speakers at 2 ohms because i'd get more power into them. Is there any way I can use resistors wired to my speakers in parallel to drop the resistance to 2 ohms? - Or is there a better solution?
Thanks!
You can use resistors, but it will defeat the purpose. If you put a resistor in, then the amp will feed just as much power into the resistor as the speaker. Here's an example using a 4-channel amp...
@ 4ohms an amp pushs 100watts RMS per channel (remember this is just an example). @ 2ohms it pushes 200 watts RMS per channel. If you hook up one 4ohm speaker to each channel, then each speaker will receive 100 watts. If you hook up one 2ohm speaker to each channel then each speaker will receive 200 watts. Now, if you hook up two 4ohm speakers to each channel (giving you a 2ohm total load per channel) then the amp still pushes 200 watts to each channel, but each speaker only gets 100 watts (200 watts/channel with 2 speakers on each channel gives each speaker 100 watts). The same thing will happen if you put in a resistor. The amp will see a 2ohm load on the channel, and push the 200 watts, but the resistor and speaker will each receive 100 watts. So you would get the same result if you just stayed at 4ohms and 1 speaker per channel.
I'd suggest getting a stronger amp, or if you want to get creative...
Look Here. Scroll down and look at Option 3 for a creative way to use 4-channel amps.
-------------
Squirrel
"No more Cpt. Kirk chit chat"
If its too loud, then you're too old
Donate to the12volt.com