- Thu Nov 15, 2012 5:38 pm
#320053
So I measured the speaker, it is only a 4'' .
So guess I'm f*cked. What would happen to any of the things on the board when putting in a 4ohm?
Here I found some speakers that might work?
http://www.europe-audio.com/Producten_c ... ep_A_ID=66
I was thinking about this:
http://www.europe-audio.com/Product.asp?Product_ID=1985
Need to read the description on the others on there site though.
- Thu Nov 15, 2012 7:05 pm
#320069
Nothing would happen besides the amp putting out less power kind lime this
1 ohm=55 watts
2 ohm=27.5 watts
4 ohm=13.75 watts
Those numbers probly aren't exact but it kinda explains what happens. Go to www.parts-express.com they might have a woofer that will work. Look into home audio, some of the midbass drivers are 4 inchers
1 ohm=55 watts
2 ohm=27.5 watts
4 ohm=13.75 watts
Those numbers probly aren't exact but it kinda explains what happens. Go to www.parts-express.com they might have a woofer that will work. Look into home audio, some of the midbass drivers are 4 inchers
- Sat Nov 24, 2012 11:22 pm
#320831
That's some bad science my friend. TC Sounds has a 8" woofer that has the ability to shit on some 15s. Now I agree that his money would be better spent on a different set up. But you do not need a big system to get big sound. You just either need a good installer and box builder or know how to do it yourself.
- Sun Nov 25, 2012 5:07 am
#320841
You could find a good quality 4" woofer, do away with the circuit board all together and then power it with a small, easily hidden, external amp.
Having a sweet mustache is half the battle.