Re: Impedance and speakers
Impedance ratings of speakers are meant to be representative, NOT an absolute measurement. There will be variations from speaker to speaker; for any given speaker there are fairly wide variations as well based on the frequency of the input signal. In real life, problems only occur when the impedance is so low that a) the amplifier can't properly handle the higher current and/or b) there isn't a wide enough gap betweeen the effective impedance and the output impedance of the amplifier, which among other things affects the dampening characteristics of the amp/speaker combination. <br /><br />A crossover is used to split a signal based on frequency, which makes it useful for a multi-driver loudspeaker system (lower frequencies to a woofer, middle to a mid-range, higher frequencies to a tweeter etc. etc.) but not necessarily for this application. That's not a completely techincally accurate description, but I'm trying to write this so you don't have to be an engineer to understand it. Empericaly, crossovers are one of the biggest causes of distortion in audio applications. <br /><br />The simplest solution is for you to just buy a 2nd speaker system identical to the first.