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Many thanks gentlemen.It seems like I'll go for 3 in parallel and take a hit on a lower net impedance.
That will give you the highest sensitivity, if your amp can handle the lowest impedance dip. The problem is Doug is right about 2.67 ohms if that is the lowest impedance dip. But most 8 ohm drivers will have dips much lower than that. If a single driver has a dip down to 4 ohms, then your amp will see a 1 point something ohm load. (1.33?? I don't know doug's cool formula. ) With full bandwidth drivers the lowest impedance is usually around 100-300Hz, and there is a lot of music energy there. So just be careful that the amp doesn't overheat. If your drivers are 16 ohm nominal, then you should be OK with any decent SS amp.
Actually, although they are rated at Nom. Imp. 8ohm, their plot shows a gentle dip to just bellow 9ohm, so that should be fine I guess. Though it would be a little more demanding to drive in terms of current demands, the 92dB+ sensitivity should do the trick .Am I correct in saying that there will be a tripling of the power handling?
Here are a couple of links to the math required to calculate series and series parallel circuits.http://www.electronics2000.co.uk/calc/series-parallel-resistor-calculator.phphttp://learnabout-electronics.org/resistors_20.phpBasically you can't add 8ohms and 16ohms in parallel and come out with a resistance higher than 8ohms. The 16ohms in parallel will always drag down the resistance of another resistor of a lesser value to a combined value below that of the smaller resistor. Take two resistors of unequal value connected in parallel and your ohm meter and measure the resulting combination.Scotty
When two drivers have the same efficiency with a 1 watt input and one of them has an impedance of half that of the other driver, when they are supplied with the same voltage the lower impedance driver will pull twice the current from the amplifier assuming it behaves as a "perfect" voltage source.This means that for any given voltage input it will produce three dB more output.
When multiple drivers are covering the same frequency range their output does not go up 3dB for every doubling of cone area indefinitely. After you have more than 2 drivers and gain 3dB you may not gain another whole 3dB with each doubling of cone area. Four drivers don't necessarily give you a 6dB increase over the output of a single driver. When you have as many as 6 drivers you start seeing near field effects at increasing distances from the array. In other words it stops behaving as a point source and starts to behave like a line source.Scotty