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you are quoting a heck of a lot there.
[QUOTE]blah blah blah[/QUOTE] to reply to niccolai.
Please remove excess text as not to re-post tons
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[QUOTE="niccolai:364170"]Word. SickSickSick, if you don't know much about OHM impedance, an OHM is a measure of electrical resistance (wich is also reprizented by the greek letter OMEGA... it looks like a horse shoe) The resitance on the cabs is allowed to be higher than the head's rated for (for example, you can have a 100 watt cab rated at 8 ohms and it will be fine to plug into a head that's 200 watts at 4 ohms) but you can't do the opposite. If the cab rating goes below the head rating, you got yourself a genuine grilled cheesed amp. You can also mix cabs together with a formula. 01 X 02 ______ o1 + o2 Say you have 1 cab thats 4 ohms (lets call it o1) and another cab that's 4 ohms (call it o2) To get the total impedance, multiply o1 by o2: 4 x 4 = 16 and divide it by o1 + o2 (4 + 4 = 8) 16 __ 8 = 2 Your 'master impedance' with both cabs plugs in is going to be 2. You would then need to plug it into a head that can go as low as 2 ohms. Most heads are rated to go no lower than 4o and most 4x10 and 1x15 bass cabs are 8o 8x10 are usually 4 ohms, wich is why you can only plug one 8x10 in. ohms law: [img]http://www.daltonelectric.com/images/OHMS-LAW.jpg[/img] Ohm symbol: [img]http://www.pro-ohm.org/online/pic/logo.gif[/img][/QUOTE]
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