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Brian wrote:With the FST the impedance stays around 6 Ohms starting at 7 kHz ...
With the FST the impedance stays around 6 Ohms starting at 7 kHz.
The FST is a very flat 8 Ohms impedance.
Quote from: Brian Cheney With the FST the impedance stays around 6 Ohms starting at 7 kHz.Quote from: Brian CheneyThe FST is a very flat 8 Ohms impedance.Ok, this is newbie question. How is it possible that the speaker has a smaller impedance than the driver ? Is it because of the crossover? Thanks,Bruno
Ok, this is newbie question. How is it possible that the speaker has a smaller impedance than the driver ? Is it because of the crossover? Thanks,Bruno
Hi Bruno,Generally if you use two 8 ohm drivers in speaker the impedance drops to the 4 ohm region.Not a hard and fast rule, but multiple drivers in combination, are usually lower in impedance than single drivers.
Hi John,Yes, at first that makes sense. In a 626R, the tweeter and the midrange are connected in parallel, so the combined impedance should be lower. But, because of the crossover, the tweeter and the midrange do not see the same frequency range. Where the two drivers overlap, I can see why the impedance would decrease. My understanding is that in the frequency range where the drivers do not overlap (e.g. above 7KHz for the tweeter), we would have only the contribution of one driver to the impedance. Is this correct?Thanks,Bruno