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In Reply to: Re: Question on impedance tabs vs. loudspeaker impedance posted by jwitzsch on September 16, 2004 at 07:09:42:
well if you want a Rule of Thumb so that you can sleep at nite knowing you have hooked them up *correctly* and not bother with fine-tuning your system, then the speaker impedance should be equal or lower than that specified at a tube amplifier's output tap. See the conundrum?
Follow Ups:
I agree,
a 6 ohm speaker should be connected
to the 4 ohm tap not the 8 ohm tap.
The lower the Zo the better for a
linear drive (aka voltage source).
Depends on what you would like to improve in your system.If it is control, then go lower, But if you need more power, then probably go to the one "matched".
It usually helps to know at what point the max output happens for that particular model.
VictorI agree, more knowledge is always good.
I have heard tube amps with lots of power
but no control on the bass.
I have heard heard tube amps with extended highs
that were very harsh and irratating(usually pentode).
I even heard tube amps that didn't handle
the crossover frequencies well.
It's all in the design and implementation -
amplifier and speaker system.But Joerg has Maggies and they definitely
prefer the lower impedance taps.
(ie they NEED current/control)As far as matched vs lower imp taps -
If you have enough volume with the 2 ohm taps
(with Maggies) then stay there.
Adding a zero will only introduce another
componant/source for distortion/
potential problem into the circuit.
The difference between 2 ohm and 3 ohm
is minimal and not worth the extra money.
The difference between 3 and 4
is another story with Maggies.
If you have enough volume
with the 2 ohm tap then
all is well IMO, FWIW.
Huh? I thought the safe rule of thumb was to , for example have a 6ohm speaker it should be hooked to the 4ohm tap, not what you are explaining in having a 6ohm speak hooked to the 8ohm tap of amp?, I have never heard it the opposite way until now, please clarify Ron Oehlert... thanks
I assumed a triode with various output taps was a tube amp, so I gave him the Tube rule of thumb. For a transistor amp the rule is reversed; speaker impedance should be equal or higher than that specified at amp output. The riddle is that he found 2 ohms to yield the best result.
My quad 12ls (6ohm) sound much better to me on my 8 ohm taps vs 4. Everything sounds better, from bass slam all the way up!
-rob,,, YOU ARE 100% RIGHT!!!! I tried my 8ohm tap, unfortunatly I could not do this before because I literally had to drill new holes in the back of the amp and Add binding posts(which after this post started I did it last night), which worked out perfectly, now I have access to both 4 & 8, and I thought it already sounded really good, but I picked up the 35 to 50hz range that was missing on the 4 ohm tap and the distortion is much lower as well as I am getting much Higher volume output at the same level from without turning it up!! Digital sounds much Smoother and fuller, the 4 ohm tap is now useless to me on this amp, but at least it is there...
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