A 4 ohm setting increases the impedence that the amplifier sees relative to an 8 ohm setting. Therefore, fewer demands are placed on the amplifier and therefore if the 8 ohm setting is too demanding for the amp it will sound better on a 4 ohm setting. The principle is the one that applies to Paul Speltz's automformers which increase the impedence that the amp sees and will improve the amp's performance up to the point where the impedence is great enough so that it limits the potential of the amp. It's a matter of matching amp to speakers. A more muscular amp than the ones you have auditioned might reach its potential better on the 8 ohm setting. It's an interesting and instructive excercise.
4-ohm setting with 8 ohm speakers
I have the Nightingale CTR.2 open baffle speakers. The manufacturer claims that "the Concentus CTR-02's speakers and crossover are designed and assembled on the acoustic screen following a scheme meant to guarantee that the impedance stays linear as the frequency changes."
However, with every amplifier used with these speakers, a 4-ohm setting sounds more natural and relaxed. Now I am listening them with the Hans Labs KT-88 power amplifier. With the 8-ohm setting, the sound is more tight, bland and stringent, it sounds more like a mid-level SS amplifier. I am wondering how this can be explained from technical point of view?
However, with every amplifier used with these speakers, a 4-ohm setting sounds more natural and relaxed. Now I am listening them with the Hans Labs KT-88 power amplifier. With the 8-ohm setting, the sound is more tight, bland and stringent, it sounds more like a mid-level SS amplifier. I am wondering how this can be explained from technical point of view?
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- 25 posts total
- 25 posts total