Wiring Multiple Subwoofer Drivers


 I’m in the process of installing new sub drivers(Dayton Audio RSS265HF-8 ohms impedance) into my pair of Kinergetics SW-900 cabinets. Each cabinet will contains six 10” drivers. I have two options for wiring them & can’t decide which to do! I would like to know if one is better than the other & the pros/cons of each. The two different wiring diagram I’m considering are:

2 sets of 3 series drivers run parallel= 12ohms

3 sets of 2 series drivers run parallel= 5.3333ohms

 

12ohms:

Pros- higher damping, less distortion, less resistance, less wire

Cons- less power

5.3333ohms:

Pros- more power

Cons- less damping, more distortion, more resistance

 

My audio pro friend (who is much smarter than me) is assisting me with the subs, he states wiring them for 12ohms is better.  But if that is case make OEM drivers & speaker designers make the products 4 to 8ohm impedance normally?

Thank you for any input, advice or suggestions!

Paul


ptheo
Yes 12 ohms is better. I've got two Dayton amps running 4 subs, all 8 ohm drivers. Tried all combinations, two and four per amp, 4, 8 & 16 ohms. Technically, on the face of it you would think that since these amps put out multiples more power into 4 than 16 that the lower the better. Probably if you care more about meters than music then 4 is better. More power! Listening to music however its clearly more tuneful and articulate, impressively so, at 16 compared to 4. Which corresponds with what Duke told me, that pretty much all his customers prefer that as well.

Your question of why they are made that way is complicated. Why they choose to design for a particular impedance is a whole different question than which sounds better when all you are changing is series/parallel.

The bigger question to me is why put all those in two cabinets when putting them in four would be so much better? The improvement you'll hear between how they are wired is nothing compared to how much better the same drivers will perform in four cabinets vs two.

Thank you for the info/response millercarbon! Sound quality is first,but I want plenty of undistorted output also. I do both music(60%) & home theater(40%). If I go 12ohm setup, my hope is that the sensitivity will be high enough(95db) I won’t need massive power to get high(110db at 25hz) quality output. But I don’t want to wire them for 12ohm & find out later I can’t get the output I need/want. The amp I plan on using will be PS Audio Stellar 700’s which output 300watts into 8 ohms.  

Regarding the cabinet choice they were pre-made by Kinergetics Audio. I don’t have 4 of them so 2 cabinets will have to do, for now. Plus, twelve 10” woofers should awesome in the sweet spot.

BTW, I called Ty from Tyler Acoustics & he suggested I go with the 5.3ohm setup.


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@ptheo 

I would like to know if one is better than the other & the pros/cons of each. The two different wiring diagram I’m considering are:

2 sets of 3 series drivers run parallel= 12ohms

3 sets of 2 series drivers run parallel= 5.3333ohms


use a 5 pole two position switch on each cabinet wiring to select 12 ohm or 5.3 ohm. 

https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/NKK-Switches/PS5N?qs=sGAEpiMZZMvNbjZ2WlReYnEL%252BmPFDxwPkry0E8...

https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/NKK-Switches/PS5N?qs=sGAEpiMZZMvNbjZ2WlReYnEL%252BmPFDxwPkry0E8...

the 12A rated switch can stand max. 760 watts @ 5.3 ohm and the 30A switch over 4.7k watts!