Jeff L
Jet Boat Junkie
- Messages
- 122
- Reaction score
- 52
- Points
- 137
- Location
- California, Maryland
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2017
- Boat Model
- Limited S
- Boat Length
- 21
to attach to my ampNot following you, why do you want to cut wire?
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to attach to my ampNot following you, why do you want to cut wire?
yes sir, thank you. I did buy 4 ga wire and a 50 amp circuit breaker. Can you explain what you mean by 8 ohm?Just went on the JL site. There’s nothing in the manual about running 8 ohm loads except if bridged (which means you're combining channels to get more power). See pic below.
So I’d email or call them if I were you. I just don’t know enough about what happens if you run an 8 ohm load. Its probably not a big deal but just in case...
Also, the manual says to use 4 gauge power wire. Is this what you’re doing?
View attachment 116476
speaker specs do rate it at 4 ohm (60 w). not sure if my set up is parallel or a series. once my head stops spinning I'll re-visit this lol
I would run new wire so if you sell your boat you can get back to stock.to attach to my amp
so how bad is running new wire? I'm not worried about the cost, just the time involved.Well, you have six channels on your new amp. If you run 4 of the speakers in series, you will only use two amp channels to do so. Your other two speakers will run on two other amp channels, and you will have two amp channels left open. Nothing wrong with two open channels.
However, the speaker sets run in series will be seeing double the load of the two speakers on their own channels, so the their output (volumes) will be significantly lower. You can make them equal using the gain controls on the amps, but it's not optimum. Overall the system will not be as able to play as loud, and you will not be taking full advantage of either the nice speakers you just bought, or the nice amp.
And as far as the amp is concerned, I don't know that it will hurt it by running an 8 ohm load when it is designed to see 4 ohms max per channel. Probably not, but again, you are mismatching the amp's design with reality.
Jeff
I understand, thank you sir! Now I have a decision to make....Not terribly time consuming. To do it neatly, maybe 4 hours. As was suggested, leave the original wiring in place (making sure the ends don't touch each other), use a fish of some kind to fish the new wires through (stiff solid core 10 gauge works well) and take your time. You can encase each new pair of wires in split loom, available in different sizes from your hardware store. And then zip tie it up out of the way and off the floor of your compartments, which will really neaten it up.
For now, you can put each speaker on its own channel-- 6 channels, 6 speakers. If you decide to add (for example), a bridged sub later to two of the channels, you can easily move the speaker wires which were on those channels to double up with another pair of speakers, and they will be in parallel, as the amp was designed to accept. Much better than series.
Jeff
This is from my dealer;@JDRacing is right. Mine is an older boat. I had 4 speakers in 2 channels, so none were in series. All were wired directly. That made reusing the wire easy.
Were I you I would say least rewire the 4 back speakers so they are parallel or single (use all 6 amp channels) (which would mean you will need a separate amp for a sub). Even being lazy and cheap I would not do your existing wiring with the series. You won't be happy after all this work...
IMHO