A question came up on another amp board I was visiting today, and I thought I would bring it here to see if I could get a better answer than what I am getting over there. No argument going on, I'm just not getting a very technical answer to the question.
If an amp is set up with multiple impedance speaker jacks, say 4, 8 & 16 ohms, each one connected to the corresponding tap on the output trans, what is the effect of running loads on two of the taps simultaneously? I.e., say a 4 ohm load on the 4 ohm tap and a 16 ohm load on the 16 ohm tap.
The typical response is no, you can't do that, but without a good explanation of why not. Since I like to understand why not, I wanted to press for a better answer. It seems off hand that the each load would present the correct load back to the primary, perhaps with the result being similar to running parallel loads on a single tap with the total primary load being halved. Is this completely wrong? Can anyone explain it?
Thanks
Hasse
If an amp is set up with multiple impedance speaker jacks, say 4, 8 & 16 ohms, each one connected to the corresponding tap on the output trans, what is the effect of running loads on two of the taps simultaneously? I.e., say a 4 ohm load on the 4 ohm tap and a 16 ohm load on the 16 ohm tap.
The typical response is no, you can't do that, but without a good explanation of why not. Since I like to understand why not, I wanted to press for a better answer. It seems off hand that the each load would present the correct load back to the primary, perhaps with the result being similar to running parallel loads on a single tap with the total primary load being halved. Is this completely wrong? Can anyone explain it?
Thanks
Hasse
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