That should work fine...matching is not critical. However if you want to be "pure", you could:
1...Insert a 2 ohm resistor in series, but that reduces damping and you may get coil resonances.
2...Install a 2 ohm to 4 ohm transformer. Hard to find and expensive.
3...Install two speakers in series, remembering to phase them correctly.
yes it will, but if you try to turn it up to loudly you may cause damage to the voice coil of your speakers
Well mostly it depends on the peak wattage of your stereo, if you have a higher wattage stereo I would go with speakers that could handle your stereos watts or they will distort.
2.0 and 2.1 or even 5.1 regarding speakers means that there are 5 speakers to one output device such as the stereo. 2 speakers coming out of 1 stereo or 5 speakers coming out of one stereo. If you were to talk about 9.2 this would mean that there are 9 speakers but attached to 2 output devices such as a television as well as a stereo. Hope this has cleared up your problem.
Speakers are measured in Ohms not Watts. Watts is the amount of power you will be supplying to the speakers. In my 2009 Corolla the speakers can handle at least 400 Watts as this is what my OEM JBL system is pushing.
The stock stereo in a 2003 Pontiac Bonneville typically has a power output of around 200 watts. This includes a combination of the head unit and the speakers. However, the exact wattage may vary slightly based on the specific audio system configuration in the vehicle.
A: Speakers are 6 ohms to match the output impedance of your system. 8 ohms will work fine minus some efficiency. THE NORMAL listening for a normal room is about a 1w. buying 600 watts speakers wil not make your system automatically push 600 watts but it will work,
The 2006 Hyundai Tiburon GS 2-door hatchback with the 2.0 liter 4-cylinder engine comes with 6 speakers with 80 watts of stereo output. It has an AM/FM stereo and a mast antenna.
Yes. That would be the ideal wattage. When if comes to watts you don't want to wire speakers to a system that will push more wattage than they can handle. Think of watts as an amount of power. If you push more power through to the speakers than they can handle than you'll blow them. Example: [Stereo]-----60watts------>[Speaker with 45 watt capacity] = Not good. You can wire a speaker with a higher wattage capacity than what the stero will put out. Example: [Stereo]-----60watts------>[Speaker with 60 watt capacity] = Good. Example: [Stereo]-----60watts------>[Speaker with 75 watt capacity] = Good too.
RMS is basically the amount of watts that the stereo can continuously dish out and the peak is like the most watts it can give out but only in bursts. And the the amount of channels is how many speakers it can give power too. So basically you can continuously give out 20 watts to each speaker if you have four hooked up to the thing.
If were talking power amp. 75 watts would be just enough for a fair home stereo sound system and good for a normal car stereo. The high end sound system in cars are sometimes over 100 watts.
Denon D-M37 system will give the best audio performance and it is a very small stereo. It is 30 watts per channel and it has converted speakers to give an extended frequency response.
If you have a newer car factory stereo or a a deck you purchased it alone should have enough power to power those. Depending on how much watts the speakers are.