I am hardly going to "recycle" a $6,000 plus piano when it plays perfectly well through the line out and headphone jacks. I am simply wanting to feed an external (small) amplifer from the piano's existing headphone jack and hook the existing speakers to it. The problem is that 2 of the speakers are 8 ohm and 2 are 4 ohm. The question I had was in what sequence could I possibly hook these up to have them work with the amp I described or recommend a different amp. A schematic is not required because I am not changing any of the exisiting wiring of the piano, just basically building my own "keyboard amp" using the existing speakers and feeding that amp from the headphone jack of the keyboard. I need advice from someone who knows about adding ohms and matching impedance. that is not my strong suit. lol
Your question is not a simple as you think. I strongly suspect that with the varying impedance of the speakers that there is at least a crossover on that piano. More likely I suspect that there is actually more than one amp and that the amplification is in fact active.
Again without a circuit for the unit it is impossible to advise you and in fact dangerous.
Can you take the unit apart and see how the speakers are connected to the board, and whether there is any series or parallel connections?
I think in view of the value of the unit using the headphone jack is the best bet. You could either buy an amp with a volume control and use passive speakers, or you could drive powered or active speakers from the headphone jack. Active speakers would be best.
Be advised however that the instrument may not sound the same. Instrument and H-Fi speakers are very different animals. Instrument speakers often having a purposely skewed response.
And yes, you do need a schematic as I can be certain those internal speakers are not fed the same frequency band.
What is the model number of the unit. We can see if a schematic is available on line. They quite often are.
Your question is not a simple one at all.