Never haerd of a 10 ohm radio. There is no 10 ohm radio amplifier on the market, when you think that must be the output impedance of the amplifier. The output impedance of a radio amp is always less than 0.5 ohms. Scroll down to related links and go to "Voltage Bridging or impedance bridging - Zout < Zin"
We do not use transitors from 4 to 10 ohms. We use resistors.
10 Ohms.
That would probably be 10K ohm, equal to 10 kilohm, or 10,000 ohm.
m (milli) ohm = 1/1000 ohmµ (micro) ohm = 1/1000000 ohmn (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000 ohmp (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000000 ohm
Rt = 10
If you connect three 4 ohm speakers in parallel, the amplifier would see a load of about 1.3 ohms. This definitely could damage the amp if you drive it too loud.
You can use your so called "4 to 8 Ohm's output" amplifier for your 10 ohms loudspeaker. All amplifiers have an output impedance of less than 0.5 ohms. You use impedance bridging when you connect the 10 ohm's loudspeaker. The "4 to 8 Ohm's output" means only that a 4 to 8 ohm loudspeaker will be adequate and not that the output impedance is 4 to 8 ohms! Scroll down to related links and look at "Impedance bridging - Wikipedia".
We do not use transitors from 4 to 10 ohms. We use resistors.
Actually...The front speakers are 5 1/4" 4 Ohm speakers and the tweeters are .6" 4 ohm tweeters. Door speakers are easy to replace, but the tweeters are impossible to find the size. Rears are 10 ohm 6 x 9" Ovals. Good luck finding 10ohm though...Can't be found. I have not yet changed the back speakers, but the front speakers are 6 inch speakers. The stock speakers are 4 ohm. Im not sure about the tweeters and rear speakers. Just pull them out and look at the back.
Yes, you can, if you have an amplifier. Connect the speakers to the amplifier and the amp to the line-out of your PC's sound card. You can use standalone amplifiers or even built-in amplifiers from different sound systems. Just make sure you have an input and an output you can use.
The short answer is yes, the long answer is maybe. Example: my Toyota's stock CD player says on it specifically, ''4 ohm speakers'', the stock speakers, however, say they are 6 ohms and they measured on a volt meter at 6 ohms. Certain higher end car audio speakers are 2 ohms but are designed for 4 ohm head units and 4 ohm head units can power 2 ohm car speakers. 4 ohm and 8 ohm speakers will work, however, different ohms can (but not always) cause different volumes out of each respective speaker. If your equipment if really old or really crappy it might get fried or if it is modern and of good quality it might get fried if you run the amp at the higher end of its output (high volume). Short answer, you will be fine just don't ask the amp to work super hard. Medium answer, I wouldn't bet more than a few hundred bucks of audio equipment on it and don't stress the amp. Long answer, its complicated and always best to match ohms even though the ohm rating is an average and 4 ohm speakers can present ohm loads of way less than 4 to over 10 depending on their output at the time. Also if you ask different people you'll get different answers.
10 ohm-m
Most likely the speakers are rated for different 'ohms' (or resistance value) in the car stereo wiring. For example, the stock speakers could be rated for 12 ohm wiring, but your aftermarket ones could be rated for 10 ohm wires. The aftermarket speaker would not work, because there is too much resistance in the existing wires. So, either find replace your stock speakers with an OEM (original equipment - manufacturer) part, find an aftermarket speaker that will work with your current wiring, or rerun your speaker wiring (not terrribly difficult, but should still be done by a professional.) Hope this helps.
The current would be about 20 volts.
3
Because 1 kiloohm is 1000 ohms. 1000 ohms is a higher resistance value than 10 ohms.
10 Ohms.