Just wondering what everyone thinks about it. I know some infinity speakers have a 2ohm voice coil so I think it couldn't be to bad.
Just wondering what everyone thinks about it. I know some infinity speakers have a 2ohm voice coil so I think it couldn't be to bad.
2 ohm is not going to be as good for sound quality. Run your subs on 2 ohm. They don't care. Your highs and mids should be at least 4 ohm.
Check any quality home sound systems. All 8 ohm. The higher the ohm the better the SQ
Y are u wanting to run your mids at two ohm? But you can do it as long as your running a good quality amp ie. Kicker JL alpine ect. But you have to take into account the amp will put out twice as much power but it can also lead to a amp going into thermal protect
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I'm wanting to run a set of fosgate components and a set of coaxials for my front stage off a Cerwin Vega Exl 350.2. The amp puts out plenty of power for the two sets, they are also known to be zeff designed pretty much a cheap zapco amp. I was just wondering if I am going to sacrifice that much SQ by running them at 2ohms?
Those Infinity's sound pretty good being they are 2 ohm voice coils. You should be fine with a decent amp.
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just thought i'd drop my two cents in here as i was browsing the forum...your speakers are the load in the equation here so they will decide how many ohms there are in your circuit...you can't change that unless you put resistors in series or parallel which i wouldn't recommend doing...infinity does make some speakers that are 2 ohm voice coils but the majority i think you'll find is 4 so that's what rating you'll look at on an amplifier to power them. subs are a different story, there are companies out there making the same sub, but one has 4 ohm voice coils and one has 2 ohm voice coils, also single or dual voice coils. depending how many subs, and how you wire them up and how you wire the voice coils, you could have anywhere from a 1 ohm load to an 8 ohm load. anyways, point being, if you've got speakers that are from the manufacturer as 4 ohms, that's what your amp will see and it'll put out whatever power it's rated for at 4 ohms. hope i didn't ramble too much and that made sense to you.
If you didn't catch the drift I am running two sets of 4ohm speakers wired down to a 2ohm load.
This is 100% incorrect when used as such a general statement, the resistance of the amplified channel has no bearing on perceived "sound quality". The main effect is sensitivity so what you need to keep in mind is wether your complete setup is going to be of 2 ohm or if you're going to mix and match impedences. This will make setting gains difficult.