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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Hi, I don't know much about electronics, so I would like some help. I
have a bi-amp mini hifi, and I want to connect one decent set of normal hifi speakers (ie with only one set of terminals per cabinet) to it that will reproduce the whole tonal range. can I just run the wires for the left bass and the left treble from my hifi onto the single set of terminals on my left speaker and the same respectively for the right? ie. can I join up the wires from the separated bi-amp signals so that I effectively merge the signals again, and stick the joined up wires straigt into non bi amped speakers without blowing anything up? are there any issues of changing resistance when the signals from the bass and the treble are connected in paralell in order to do this? Any help would be much appreciated. |
#2
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![]() Ed wrote: Hi, I don't know much about electronics, so I would like some help. I have a bi-amp mini hifi, and I want to connect one decent set of normal hifi speakers (ie with only one set of terminals per cabinet) to it that will reproduce the whole tonal range. can I just run the wires for the left bass and the left treble from my hifi onto the single set of terminals on my left speaker and the same respectively for the right? ie. can I join up the wires from the separated bi-amp signals so that I effectively merge the signals again, and stick the joined up wires straigt into non bi amped speakers without blowing anything up? are there any issues of changing resistance when the signals from the bass and the treble are connected in paralell in order to do this? Any help would be much appreciated. Hi Ed... In my humble opinion you're almost certain to immediately destroy the output stages of your amplifier. Suggest you find another solution. Take care. Ken |
#3
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In a word NO. You will fry at least one of the amps if not both.
Why don't you seperate the woofer wires in the speaker and drill a small hole in the back so you will still have the advantage of bi-amping ? Just make sure of phasing. You could concievably run the outputs through a crossover backwards, but that is ridiculous, plus it will still present an abnormal load to the amps. How they would handle it is unknown, and if the frequency of the crossover doesn't match the frequency of the amp's crossover it's likely to fry, plus it won't sound right. JURB |
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