Ok, I know I work for Radioshack and probably should know the answer to this but I don't.I have a couple of older floor speakers but am getting a new receiver and it says I should use speakers with a nominal impedance of 8 to 16 ohms. I don't know how many ohms my floor speakers are and am not sure what will happen dare I hook them up to the new receiver.
Anybody know what the hell I'm talking about or could maybe shed some light on the situation?? I also should add that I will be adding more speakers soon as well.
Thanks!
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 13 of 13
-
-
A rough guide to finding the impedance of your speaker is to measure the resistance (ohms) across the terminals of the speaker with a multimeter, and multiply it by 1.3. This will give you the impedance (ohms).
http://wolfstone.halloweenhost.com/HalloweenTech/spkimp_SpeakerImpedanceMatching.html#Why -
can you get to see inside your speakers as it may have it on the back of the magnet if you can
-
Good old Ohms law. current = voltage / resistance.
The lower your resistance, the current that your amplifier will have to produce.
More current = more heat and more strain on your amplifier, perhaps reducing its life.
Think of it this way, a dead short=0 ohms, and you know what happens when you short something out.Just what is this reality thing anyway? -
The Ohms value referred to on speakers is an impedance, not a resistance, as inferred by Craigs answer.
The vast majority of speakers on the market today are 8 0hms impedance, though not all. It should state the impedance somewhere on the back of the speaker, usually near the terminals, along with the max input power in watts. -
Yeah, I actually already checked the back of the speaker but no luck there. The boxes are old but in great shape and the speakers were replace only a few years ago. I might try seeing if the back of the speaker itself says or take Craig's advice and borrow a multimeter from work and get the true answer.
Thanks guys. -
Um...the only ohms I've ever encountered are in physics and ap physics. It's a unit of measurement for resistance. I'm taking a stab at it but I'm not sure if it's right or not...here goes: less ohms = higher volume?
-
-
So since these are older speakers they are prolly 8 ohm speakers right? B/c from what I understand the older speakers are going to be 8ohms but some of the newer ones could be 2 or even 4 ohms.
-
Originally Posted by Craig Tucker
-
Nice article. Your multiplier of 1.3, shouldn't that have been 1.21(1/sqr(2)) instead?
I am trying to remember all the old AC fundamentals classes I took over 20 years ago.Just what is this reality thing anyway?
Similar Threads
-
All in one converter for x64 systems?
By davidsl_128 in forum Video ConversionReplies: 4Last Post: 7th Feb 2011, 15:29 -
Moving between Avid systems
By Jorx in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 2Last Post: 5th Nov 2010, 14:36 -
Running two Operating Systems with one PC?
By neworldman in forum ComputerReplies: 7Last Post: 21st Jul 2010, 18:45 -
64 bit op systems
By dblake2 in forum Authoring (DVD)Replies: 5Last Post: 10th Jul 2008, 16:44 -
all in one home theater systems
By CODEWERKX in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 1Last Post: 4th Dec 2007, 11:09