Easy - The lower the resistance, the more current flow can occur. Think about resistance as a water hose. The less resistance the more flow. When you have more current flow, there is more heat generated because conductors are not perfect, they also have a resistance. The amp runs hotter and requires bigger cooling heatinks, bigger caps to store all those electrons, wider electrical traces, bigger posts, etc.
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Expanding on the relationship Audioman pointed to... The relationships between resistance (ohms), current and voltage are defined by Ohm’s Law: V/I = R where V is voltage (volts); I is current (amps); R is resistance (ohms). See link here.... https://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/tutorials/ohm/Q.ohm.intro.html At constant V, if R increases, I will decrease. At constant V, if R decreases, I will increase. As a simple example (I’ll defer to Almarg or Atmasphere for their input on a better voltage value or range to use in discussing an operating amplifier).... At 120V if R = 8 ohm, I = 15 At 120V if R = 4 ohm, I = 30 At 120 V if R = 16 ohm, I = 7.5 So you can see how greatly current requirements are affected by resistance. It’s important to remember that a speaker’s resistance might not be constant across the frequency range. Some portions of the frequency range might be associated with low resistance and consequently run up against the current limitations of the amp reproducing sound in that frequency range. Hope this helps. |
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