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Post by carrjimi on Sept 26, 2014 6:13:44 GMT -7
Compared the two and found them to be very different. When I rewired it Parallel, it was much more open and had more sparkle. When I went back to series, was much more mid focused and not as "chimey".
It's tough to say which I like better at home. Need to try it in a band setting.
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Post by cap217 on Sept 26, 2014 9:09:52 GMT -7
In parallel you are increasing the load so I assume you hooked it into the 4ohm tap on the amp right?
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Post by DRZ on Sept 26, 2014 11:07:00 GMT -7
In parallel you are increasing the load so I assume you hooked it into the 4ohm tap on the amp right? Correction Chris DECREASING the load in parallel , but the 4 ohm tap is the correct tap and I hope carrjimi changed it from 16 ohm the series load. All Classic AC-30's are wired in series for 16 ohm , and I don't believe they lack chime.
Z
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Post by cap217 on Sept 26, 2014 12:11:13 GMT -7
In parallel you are increasing the load so I assume you hooked it into the 4ohm tap on the amp right? Correction Chris DECREASING the load in parallel , but the 4 ohm tap is the correct tap and I hope carrjimi changed it from 16 ohm the series load. All Classic AC-30's are wired in series for 16 ohm , and I don't believe they lack chime.
Z
I was going to write decrease but 4 ohms seemed like more in my head. I think it has to do with you can run a 4ohm out of an amp to an 8 or 16 ohm load speaker/cab. So 4 ohm is higher the way I was typing.
Anyways, Z set us straight.
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Post by carrjimi on Sept 26, 2014 12:15:09 GMT -7
I did use the 4ohm tap. Can speakers be damaged at all using at 4ohms? being that one speaker is 15 watts?
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