Bill Assumpcao
Active member
Howdy folks,
The more that I read this excerpt from my Mark II manual, the more confused I get :?
Question 2:
Would anybody care to set me straight on this? I can't seem to wrap my brain around this :roll:
Dee, Dee, Deeeee,
BillA
The more that I read this excerpt from my Mark II manual, the more confused I get :?
Question 1: If I had a 60watt model, I'm supposed to plug my 8ohm speaker into the 8ohm jack. But, because I've got a 60/100 model I'm supposed to plug into the 4ohm jack when using 60 watts? Why?Mark II manual said:Three speaker jacks are provided: one 8 ohm and two 4 ohm. With 60 watts models, plug the single 8 ohm speaker into the 8 ohm jack for the
most power and clarity. If two 8 ohm, speakers are used, plug each one into a 4 ohm jack for proper balance. But you may also try other combinations if you want one speaker slightly louder or happen to prefer the tone caused by a slight mismatch; it will do no harm to the amplifier. With 100/60 watt models we recommend that when you run a single 8 ohm speaker you use the 60 watt position and plug into a 4 ohm jack. This will give the strongest possible output without damaging the speaker. You may get more clean power by switching to 100 watts, and still more by also plugging into the 8 ohm jack but remember to avoid lead tone distortion as it increases power dramatically (though not so much the apparent loudness) and may cause speaker damage. With two 8 ohm speakers, one in each 4 ohm jack, the 100 RMS can be safely used.
Question 2:
If I remember correctly (or am I having an old-timers moment?) 8ohms is more resistance than 4ohms. Therefore, the amp should have to work harder, hence clip sooner, and not give me a cleaner signal.Mark II manual said:You may get more clean power by switching to 100 watts, and still more by also plugging into the 8 ohm jack...
Would anybody care to set me straight on this? I can't seem to wrap my brain around this :roll:
Dee, Dee, Deeeee,
BillA