When you put a meter on a speaker to measure the impedance, will the meter usually read higher or lower than the actual impedance of the speaker?
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Nominal impedance (what is usually quoted as the impedance of a speaker) and DC resistance (what you read with an Ohmeter) are only loosely related. The actual impedance of a speaker can vary by as much as 1/2-2x across the supported frequency range. 5 Ohms may very well be the specified DC resistance of your speaker."It's hard to be enigmatic if you have to go around explaining yourself all the time"
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Then I shouldn't match the amp setting to the metered reading, right? The speakers are a pair of 8 ohm Boogie Celestions and a pair of 8 ohm vintage 30's.
Originally posted by marcus View PostNominal impedance (what is usually quoted as the impedance of a speaker) and DC resistance (what you read with an Ohmeter) are only loosely related. The actual impedance of a speaker can vary by as much as 1/2-2x across the supported frequency range. 5 Ohms may very well be the specified DC resistance of your speaker.
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Originally posted by lhrocker View PostThen I shouldn't match the amp setting to the metered reading, right? The speakers are a pair of 8 ohm Boogie Celestions and a pair of 8 ohm vintage 30's."It's hard to be enigmatic if you have to go around explaining yourself all the time"
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The resistance is usually a close reading to impedance like was mentioned and should only be used to get an idea of what you have. Measuring resistance is only one portion of what gives a speaker it's impedance. Four electrical quantities determine the impedance of a circuit: resistance, capacitance, inductance and frequency. Or an easier way to remember it is impedance is resistance plus reactance.
Matt
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