Watts???

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ochuckie

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I'm 60 years old with an old brain and PA systems ????
I recently purchased some used pa stuff to use with my family and friends..
Some Peavey SP3s (8ohm) 100-200watt,two monitors (8ohm) @ 250watts per and a Carvin PA amp HT760M 2 channel with EQ with an output of 175/175 for 8ohm speakers. The amp has an output of 750w @ 4ohm (bridged).
1. What does bridged mean?
2. Will this amp provide power for both the mains (the SP3s) and the Monitors or do I need to get another amp for the other pair?
3. Will the 0hm value change when I pair the speakers?
I'm going to buy a mixer later on.
 
ochuckie said:
I'm 60 years old with an old brain and PA systems ????
I recently purchased some used pa stuff to use with my family and friends..
Some Peavey SP3s (8ohm) 100-200watt,two monitors (8ohm) @ 250watts per and a Carvin PA amp HT760M 2 channel with EQ with an output of 175/175 for 8ohm speakers. The amp has an output of 750w @ 4ohm (bridged).
1. What does bridged mean?
When you bridge an amp, you are turning a stereo amp into a mono amp with twice the power. This is useful for subwoofers and other specialized applications. It doesn't sound like you will need to use this feature.
ochuckie said:
2. Will this amp provide power for both the mains (the SP3s) and the Monitors or do I need to get another amp for the other pair?
You can safely run 2 SP3s one one side of the amp and 2 monitors on the other side of the amp. I don't know if that will be enough for your situation. If you need more coverage, you need more amps.
ochuckie said:
3. Will the 0hm value change when I pair the speakers?
If you hook two 8ohm speakers to one side of the amp amp, the amp will see 4 ohms. If you hook four 8 ohm speakers to one side of the amp, it will see 2 ohms. If your amp can handle 2 ohms, you will be fine, but not all of them do.
 
well said.

a little easier look;
1 speaker per channel=8ohms
2speakers per channel= 4 ohms
4 speakers per channel= 2 ohms...

bridged is using both channels into one source, so to speak.
1 speaker into 2 channels= 8ohms bridged (i think, it could be 16ohms)

i really just like to have 1 power amp for each pair of speakers. if you do that, a crossover would be a good thing to have.

stay away from 2 ohms... please. its quite dangerous in theory. power surge at 2ohms can be lethal.
 
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