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Can I use 12 Ohms instead of 8 Ohms speaker?

Prohor

Sep 27, 2016
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Recommend load resistance is 8Ω, what would be happen if I use 3 speaker ( each have 4Ω) in series connection = 12 Ω?

1. Can it damage the IC ?
2. Can it damage the speaker?
3. Can it reduce speaker performance?
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Jan 21, 2010
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No.
No. *
Marginally.

* Provided the speakers are each rated at about half the rated output power or more.
 

Audioguru

Sep 24, 2016
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Speakers in series sound boomy because their resonance is not damped by the extremely low output impedance of a modern solid state amplifier.
 

Prohor

Sep 27, 2016
34
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Speakers in series sound boomy because their resonance is not damped by the extremely low output impedance of a modern solid state amplifier.
I think it may little boomy but I wanted to test it's output. Little experiment it will be. Currently I have 8 inch 4Ω speakers but no rating printed on it :( . So I am not able to adjust it properly and when 100 w amplifier connected to these in series (4+4) as 8Ω recommended by the amplifier datasheet. It plays proper sound upto 60% volume but losses sound quality above 60% and seems noisy. With this I am trying to learn about sound system from goole and electronicspoint forum.
Thanks for your reply.

[ The more time I am spending here the more I am loving www.electronicspoint.com :)]
 

Audioguru

Sep 24, 2016
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A loudspeaker is supposed to be enclosed in an enclosure designed for its specifications for it to sound good.
If too much power is fed to a speaker then it can be physically damaged (its coil smashes into its magnet structure) and/or it burns out.
 
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