I have a Bugera 2x12 combo amp. It has an impediance switch. 4,8 and 16 ohms. Could I go from the two stock 8ohm speakers seemingly wired in series to buying two 4 ohms replacement speakers using that switch or is it just for the extension cab. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. shootingstarno
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Do your speakers connect directly to one of the speaker jacks already or are they connected by internal speaker hookups? I assume they are connected to these jacks by way of a plug and it is currently selected to 16ohms impedance. You can wire two 8 ohms in parallel to 4ohms or they will be in series as 16ohms. Two 4 ohms in series will be 8 ohms and that will work fine, just select 8 ohms on the switch. By the way, what model is this Bugera?When the going gets weird... The weird turn pro!
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Bugera BC30 response
Originally posted by DrGonz78 View PostDo your speakers connect directly to one of the speaker jacks already or are they connected by internal speaker hookups? I assume they are connected to these jacks by way of a plug and it is currently selected to 16ohms impedance. You can wire two 8 ohms in parallel to 4ohms or they will be in series as 16ohms. Two 4 ohms in series will be 8 ohms and that will work fine, just select 8 ohms on the switch. By the way, what model is this Bugera?
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Two speakers can be wired in series or in parallel. Two 16 ohm speakers in a cab would be wired parallel to present 8 ohms to the amp. Impedance is not your issue for tone. And don't change your rectifier. it might change the sustain a little, but not the tone.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Re impediance switch
Originally posted by Enzo View PostTwo speakers can be wired in series or in parallel. Two 16 ohm speakers in a cab would be wired parallel to present 8 ohms to the amp. Impedance is not your issue for tone. And don't change your rectifier. it might change the sustain a little, but not the tone.
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One of those must have been me
In principle, same voice coil is somewhat lighter in 16 ohms (thinner wire but same winding length so less copper) but it's a slight difference, there are many other variables: cone thickness, rigidity, amount and depth of ribs (or no ribs at all), straight or curvilinear ("trombone") shape, adhesives, former material, etc.
LOTS of variables so the technically possible difference must be taken in context.
I think only Jensen publishes frequency response curves for 4/8/16 ohms and they are the definitive statement, more than verbal descriptions (punchy/restricted/smooth/chimey/scoped/etc.) which are vague in the best case and subjective always.
But in your case, you have a heavy rock tuned amp; a Twin or a Super Reverb or a Bandmaster , most any Black or Silverface chassis might be a better option.Juan Manuel Fahey
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