If you run 2 speakers of the same model but one is 4 and the other 8 ohms, which one will sound louder and approximately how noticable would it be? Would it make running both a waste of time due to the one taking over and causing it to sound the same as with one?
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speaker impedence question
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The only thing you can say for certain is that more current will flow through the 4 ohm speaker. Therefore, presumably, it would be louder. How noticeable? You'd have to judge that. Are both in the same cabinet? If not, one cabinet might be more efficient."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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In series, parallel or something else, eg different amps?My band:- http://www.youtube.com/user/RedwingBand
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Originally posted by daz View PostIf you run 2 speakers of the same model but one is 4 and the other 8 ohms, which one will sound louder and approximately how noticable would it be? Would it make running both a waste of time due to the one taking over and causing it to sound the same as with one?
Double the power might sound like a lot, but our ears have progressively less and less response to more and more sound power (the response is logarithmic). This is why decibels were invented, and doubling the power is the same as a 3 dB increase.
So (all else being the same) the 4 ohm speaker will be 3 dB louder. This is certainly detectable, but not very substantial, as far as our ears and brains are concerned.
(One decibel is considered the smallest change our ears can reliably detect. It takes ten decibels to make a sound appear to be twice as loud.)
Only you can decide if it's a waste of time or not...keep in mind you have twice the expense, and twice the weight in speaker to haul around, and your amplifier has to be comfortable driving a 2.66 ohm load (that's 4 ohms and 8 ohms in parallel).
-Gnobuddy
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That all else equal part is the kicker. If one speaker gets twice the power, it is 3db louder for that. But if the other speaker is 3db more efficient, then they wind up being equally loud. In other words there is more to it than simple impedance.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostThat all else equal part is the kicker.
So, if the speaker designer did his/her job properly...
-Gnobuddy
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Originally posted by daz View PostSeries.
Now you have one-third of the total signal voltage across the 4 ohm speaker, and two-thirds of it across the 8 ohm speaker.
That means the 8 ohm speaker has twice as much voltage across it as the 4 ohm speaker does.
The combined effect of twice the drive voltage, and twice the speaker impedance, is to deliver twice the power to the 8 ohm speaker.
So, if all else is the same (same speaker efficiency for both drivers, etc), then it is the 8 ohm speaker that will now be 3 dB louder. Exactly the opposite of the parallel-speaker case.
I should add that it's not unusual for the fundamental resonance frequency of nominally identical speakers to vary randomly by a few percent, and because the speaker impedance peaks and varies sharply around that frequency, it's quite likely that the power sharing between the two speakers at frequencies right around resonance will not follow the simple reasoning outlined above.
But "right around resonance" is only a small part of the overall frequency range, so even if somewhat unpredictable things happen in that region, the big picture shouldn't change too much. All else being the same, the eight ohm speaker will be 3 dB louder.
-Gnobuddy
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The bottom line is that one of the speakers would be a little bit louder than the other, and three feet away you'd never notice that. Nothing cosmic will happen.
So, if the speaker designer did his/her job properly...
I further suspect that combining the 4 and 8 ohm versions of speakers is not on the list of intended uses by the maker. And they likely are not tweaking anything to get them to sound the same in that application.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Thanks guys, that helps. I wouldn't even be asking or thinking of doing this but it's a unique situation rather longwinded so i would go into it. But suffice it to say it's the only solution for what i want given a certain speaker that i love in 4 ohms is so rare it would be impossible to find another in 4.
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Originally posted by daz View PostSeries.
both speakers should be a little less loud ; since total speaker goes up ; just a little bit.....
Both is right ; the sky will not fall regardless.....
-g
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Originally posted by daz View PostThanks guys, that helps. I wouldn't even be asking or thinking of doing this but it's a unique situation rather longwinded so i would go into it. But suffice it to say it's the only solution for what i want given a certain speaker that i love in 4 ohms is so rare it would be impossible to find another in 4.
What spekers are we atalking about?
And what amp?
Are other speakers involved?
Must it fit in an already made cabinet or is it a new buiuld?
because in the latter case I might suggest something.Juan Manuel Fahey
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