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#1 |
Active Member
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I'm looking a set of speakers that list the nominal impedance as 6 ohm and the minimum as 4 ohm. These are rear surround speakers. If I use them in conjuction with my other current 8 ohm speakers (R/L/C) will this cause issues? My reciever is an Elite -21, I'm sort of a noob when it comes to this subject matter, I know that the lower the number, the harder your reciever/amp has to work, but beyond that I don't know too much more. So what's the difference between the nominal and the minimum #'s? Somebody please educate me as to the in's and out's of this subject and whether or not these speakers are a good idea for my 5.1 system?
Thanks! Last edited by Dieselboy; 12-18-2009 at 10:53 PM. |
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#2 |
Senior Member
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Well, no matter what you set the volume to, more current rushes into the 4-ohm load, doubling the power delivered (compared to 8-ohm) and the sensitivity or gain. You could end up with impedance dips in complex crossover designs from the effect of shunt capacitance from the woofers low-pass. In an ideal world you should make sure that your speakers impedance match, but this isn't an ideal world. A 4-ohm difference won't likely hurt your receiver, but the down side is your speakers won't sound as nice. However, 90% of the people who use home theaters they bought independently do so with mismatched impedance. I wouldn't lose any sleep over it unless you are trying to drive a much larger difference. Try and keep the difference between 2-4-ohms to insure you don't damage anything.
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#3 |
Expert Member
Dec 2008
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It appears that your system's manual describes changing the speaker impedance option from 8 ohms to 6 ohms, page 40, but this seems to be for all the speakers. You would be better off getting 8 ohm speakers for your surrounds but if you decide to get the 6 ohm speakers you may want to switch the system to 6 ohm since higher impedance speakers generally won't cause a problem to the amp section of the AVR. Also be sure you run the auto MCACC setup option which should equalize the system for your room, I think. If you use 6 ohm speakers on an 8 ohm setting you might invalidate your warranty, but they, Pioneer, may not be so picky about it.
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Read the Impedandance & Sensitivity of a Speaker thread. |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Speaker Impedance with Reciever | Receivers | Snpbond | 5 | 11-24-2008 12:48 PM |
Speaker Impedance... | Speakers | KayaM | 7 | 08-05-2008 03:20 AM |
Help with Impedance and Timbre Matching | Speakers | Schrute Farms | 17 | 04-02-2008 03:02 AM |
Impedance: In Speakers | Receivers | JJ | 12 | 01-13-2008 11:11 PM |
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