4 or 8 ohm connection for a 6 ohm speaker?


I have a pair of Thiel CS2’s that have a nominal impedance of 6 ohms. My mono blocks have output impedance connections for 4, 8 or 16 ohm speakers. Is it best to connect the speakers to the 4 ohm or 8 ohm connections? 
Thanks for your thoughts.

Bill from Nova Scotia
wgs57
Roger Modjeski ( music reference ) advocates light loading but also listening. Clipping is bad, so listen for that also. I light load my Vandersteen TreoCT ( an engineered easy load at 6 ohm nominal ) with the 2 ohm tap on my RM-9. Amp stays in class A longer and at the relatively low volume I listen at - sounds better.
have fun - enjoy those great speakers! And the music !
As most have said already, try the lower option first. I have a pair of speakers that average around 12 ohms during play. I tried the 8 ohm posts first and was disappointed. I the 4 ohm post and the speakers sounded much better. 
HI, 
Some tube amps behave better on 8ohm taps. As your speakers demand a little push the 4ohm tap would propably be better but you wouldn't know till you have tried.
Thanks for everyone's input! Much appreciated!

Originally I had placed the speakers on the 8 ohm taps as recommended by the person who sold the pair to me...he had a tube stereo power amp. After listening to my setup at home on my Dynaco MK 3's I was never really satisfied. Is it possible that the bass was less than satisfactory and the highs were shrill? I still enjoyed listening to the speakers though and I did try positioning them slightly differently but left it that way until now. 

Today I moved the speakers to the 4 ohm tap and listening to the same music the bass was way way more full and the highs were less shrill...is that possible? I feel that is what I heard (my hearing isn't what it used to be). I do honestly think the music is better on the 4 ohm tap and I am sure I heard distortion when on the 8 ohm tap. My audio source was from a Bluesound Node 2i playing music from Tidal. 

I feel definitely more satisfied now and nothing blew up LOL. 

Bill from Nova Scotia


As others have said, try it and see what you like best.  My experience is similar to yours.  I have Harbeth Super HL5 Plus and with some recordings, they sounded a little hot on the top end, or as you put it, "shrill".  I knew they shouldn't sound like that and switching to the 4 ohm taps on my Rogue M-180 monoblocks did the trick of taming that, while not losing any of the luscious mid-range.  I use four subwoofers, so wasn't looking to gain anything in the bass department, but I did end up turning the volume down a little on the subs after making the change.