I know this is a car audio forum, but excuse me if this is the wrong place to ask this question. I have a pioneer sx-x360 5.1 system. the impedance of the amplifier(receiver) is 4 ohms. my question is, can i connect a 6 ohm impedance speaker to this amplifier? will this blow out the amp or speaker? thanks in advance.
Yes, the manual for the SX-X360 lists the amplifier specifications as: RMS Power Output / 100W per channel / 10% T.H.D. / 4 Ohm. The usage of a 6 Ohm speaker will limit the amplifier to provide less power to the speaker, but will not damage the amplifier.
thanks wingless I am trying to understand this, if you have an amplifier with 4 Ohm specification, am I right to conclude that connecting any speaker with impedance greater than 4 Ohm i.e 6 or 8 Ohm will not damage the amplifier, and if the amplifier specification is say for e.g. 8 Ohms, connecting a speaker with lower impedance such as 4 Ohms or 6 Ohms will damage the amplifier? Once again thanks for the reply.
The specification section of that manual is poorly written. A properly written manual will list the minimum acceptable impedance for the amplifier. A larger impedance (Ohms) is okay, less than the minimum is not okay. The 6 Ohm speaker connected to your amplifier is okay. It will probably have less volume than the 4 Ohm speaker, but won't hurt the amplifier.