4 ohm speakers, 2, 4 or 8 ohm taps on amps


My speakers are 4 Ohm (Innersound ISIS) and the amp I use for the panels (Sonic Frontiers Power 2) has 2, 4 and 8 Ohm taps available. I currently have it set at 4 Ohm, made sense to me. A few people have suggested I change to the 2 Ohm tap "just to be safe"

Comments and does it make a difference?
r_burke
They may be right, I am not sure how stable the Isis is they may dip down low, if they dip lower then 3 ohms, I'd feel more comfortable on the 2 ohm tap as well.
It's really not a issue of 'safe' so much as sonic's, especially if absolute power is not an issue. Use the tap which sounds best to you. Try them all for that matter. I have a 160wt SF amp and I drive 4 ohm speakers with a minimum of 3.5 ohms off the 8 ohm tap. The highs are much smoother, and because I have 92db efficient speakers I have plenty of bass power available for any listing volume in my room. The bass is both full and tight. When I used the 4 ohm tap the highs suffered some. JME - YMMV.
When I bought my Proac response 2 which are 8 Ohms, my dealer set my amp at a 4 Ohm tap. I don't really see it neither, but everything sounds fine to me.
A multi-tapped tube amp will deliver maximum power to the speakers when the speaker's impedance is correctly matched to the appropriate output transformer tap. This may or may not be the tap that also sounds the best with that particular speaker; for instance, the 16-ohm high efficiency speakers I built for my parents sound best on the 4 ohm tap of their JoLida tube amp.

Now the panel of the InnerSound Isis is going to be a very unorthodox load. In the crossover region (1 kHz as I recall) the impedance will be fairly high - perhaps between 50 and 100 ohms (I don't know the particulars on the Isis). The impedance will decrease with increasing frequency, and bottom out around 1.5 ohms in the high treble. It's not real straightforward what number should be picked as representative of the panel's impedance. Therefore, it's also not real staightforward which tap would result in the best power delivery, nor which would sound best.

My suggestion is to try 'em all. I have several customers using multitapped tube amps to drive electrostats, and there is no clear trend among them as to which tap works best. Try one tap for one channel and another for the other channel, and A-B compare using a mono source (or using a couple of Radio Shack Y-jacks to get a mono signal to both channels).

Duke
Thank you all, since I won't kill anything by experimenting that's the plan. Especially appreciate the response from Duke since he explained how to do do some A-B comparison in detail, and I would have wrestled with the idea for a while before I figured it out. Thanks Duke

Richard
leave it on four ohms it will go down to two ohms on the four ohm taps. remember ther are alot of people out ther that dont know ther elbow from there as-
At least what have you done? I've the same question with my Sonic Frontiers Power 2 and my Kef 205 Reference.
Alessandro
Difference Between 1 Ohm Or 4 Ohms

A voice coil is present in every speaker and subwoofer, this device basically offers the electrical resistance which resisting property we call is impedance. As the speaker’s impedance declines, it becomes very easy for the amplifier to deliver power to it.

So, technically considering the difference lies between 1 ohm and 4 ohms is only about the resistance of a speaker’s voice coil offers to the audio current provided by amplifier. The main reason for overheating the amplifier is when resistance is too low that power supply increases greatly than its capability to manage.

Make clear in your mind, if you are thinking of connecting a 4-ohm speaker with a 4-ohm amplifier you are totally wrong. Finding a perfect matching is highly recommended to meet your desired requirements like a 4-ohm speaker can be connected to a 1-ohm amplifier. It is the only way your loudspeaker will not handle the amplifiers full power output.

Another aspect to be very clear, one should be very careful and connecting while connecting the 1-ohm speaker with a 4-ohm amplifier, the amplifier will be overloaded to be even over burned.


source :  https://speakersninja.com/what-hits-harder-1-ohm-or-4-ohm/