Re: Tonal difference between 4 and 16 Ohms?
I have ordered a Genz Benz 2x12 g-flex cab. Will i notice differences between the 4 ohm input and the 16 ohm input? If so, what? btw, Both are mono inputs, will not be using the stereo inputs.
thanks guys
If there is a 4 ohm and 16 ohm input, it's most likely that the 4 ohm hookup has the two speakers (which are probably 8 ohms each) in parallel. The 16 ohm input has them in series.
You will have to listen to which sounds better, because this will have a lot to do with your amplifier, which I haven't seen mentioned here. I'll explain why: With speakers, the lower the total impedance, the harder it is for the amplifier to drive them. The speakers will "pull" more current from the amp, and if the amp isn't strong enough, it may distort, shut down, or even blow. If your amp is okay with this, there is an upside - there will be more power available from the amp to drive the speakers. In theory, as the speaker impedance goes down, the amplifier power goes up. An ideal amplifier would deliver, for example, 50 Watts into 8 ohms, and 100 Watts in to 4 ohms. But no amp is ideal, and guitar amps tend to cut a lot of corners in design because price is so crucial. If a guitar amp can deilver about 50% more power into 4 ohms, that's pretty good. By comparison, expensive hi-fi amps will deliver close to double the power. I once designed a 25 Watt (at 8 ohms) amplifier with a huge amount of available current. It was often used with a full range ribbon driver loudspeaker that had an impedance of 1 ohm!! Nobody could understand how this 25 Watt amp drove this difficult load so well. It worked because into 1 ohm it could deliver 200 Watts!! Also, it's harder for tubes to deliver more current than transistors. (Power consists of both voltage and current). So as you can see, it's not a simple thing. What is the power rating of your amplifier? Does it specify 8 ohm and 4 ohm power? It is tube or solid state?
Now with 16 ohms, the speakers will want more voltage than current. That translates to a generally higher powered amp, because they will have the voltage necessary to drive a 16 ohm load.
What someone else said here is also true: Unless the speakers are perfectly matched, they will sound more different at 16 ohms (series)than at 4 ohms (parallel).
Try it both ways and let your ears decide. But if you prefer 4 ohms, check to see that the amp isn't running abnormally hotter than usual.
Hope this wasn't too technical.
Best of luck,
Noth