In Ceiling Garage Speakers?

jcPanny

jcPanny

Audioholic Ninja
In-ceiling speakers

The link doesn't work.

I have the Phoenix Gold in-ceilings in my distributed audio system and they would be great for the garage speakers:
http://www.amazon.com/Phoenix-Gold-6-5-inch-Ceiling-Speakers/dp/B0006FK3Y2/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1202833608&sr=8-1

I actually used an extra pair of bookshelf speakers in the garage. It worked pretty well and I can turn them up and hear the music in the front of the house when washing the car, etc.

Are you sure that that receiver can handle a 4 ohm load? If you have additional speakers connected to the "A" terminals, the receiver will see a <4 ohm load and will likely overheat and shutdown. Add an impedance matching speaker selector or VCs if you are connecting more than 2 pairs of speakers to the receiver.
 
M

MOOSEKNUCKLE

Junior Audioholic
The Set-up I Plan On Running Will Be




A = 2 Speakers / Rt And Lft Inside The House (FLOOR STANDING LOUDSPEAKERS)

B = 4 Speakers Wired Parallel / 2 Rts AND 2 Lfts (


(a Nd B Channel Can Be Switched And Operated Independantly Or At The Same Time..sort Of A Dual Zone)

What Do You Think?
 
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bandphan

bandphan

Banned
what are you looking to accomplish with the speakers, How often are you in garage, ect? Im always fiddling around on one of the saws or something so i wanted a little better sound out there.
 
jcPanny

jcPanny

Audioholic Ninja
Speaker Connections

The Set-up I Plan On Running Will Be




A = 2 Speakers / Rt And Lft Inside The House (FLOOR STANDING LOUDSPEAKERS)

B = 4 Speakers Wired Parallel / 2 Rts AND 2 Lfts (


(a Nd B Channel Can Be Switched And Operated Independantly Or At The Same Time..sort Of A Dual Zone)

What Do You Think?
That receiver is stable into 4 ohms and your connection scheme is fine if you want to run the A OR B speakers but not A AND B. If all 6 pairs of speakers are on, the receiver would see 8 ohms in parallel with 4 ohms = <3 ohms.

A couple Volume Controls or a speaker selector with the impedance matching feature will maintain a 4-8 ohm load for the receiver.
 
M

MOOSEKNUCKLE

Junior Audioholic
what are you looking to accomplish with the speakers, How often are you in garage, ect? Im always fiddling around on one of the saws or something so i wanted a little better sound out there.
EXACTLY WHAT I PLAN TO USE THEM FOR...

IN THE GARAGE EVERY DAY FOR HOURS AT A TIME..I DO ALOT OF STEEL FAB.ALWAYS RUNNING SOME KIND OF MACHINE
 
M

MOOSEKNUCKLE

Junior Audioholic
That receiver is stable into 4 ohms and your connection scheme is fine if you want to run the A OR B speakers but not A AND B. If all 6 pairs of speakers are on, the receiver would see 8 ohms in parallel with 4 ohms = <3 ohms.

A couple Volume Controls or a speaker selector with the impedance matching feature will maintain a 4-8 ohm load for the receiver.
I THINK I MIGHT HAVE BEEN UN CLEAR ABOUT THE SET UP..

6 SPEAKERS TOTAL BETWEEN BOTH CHANNELS.

CHANNEL A = 2 FLOOR STANDING UNITS INSIDE / 1 RT 1 LFT


CHANNEL B = WOULD BE: 4 SPEAKERS TOTAL 2 RTS 2 LFTS
WIRED IN PARALLEL
 

Attachments

H

Highbar

Senior Audioholic
It's not that you were unclear, we understood what you were saying. The thing is that with A/B speakers they run off the same amps in the receiver, therefore if you were to run all 3 sets of speakers the amp would see the sum total of resistance. You would be fine to run the A or B speakers with that setup but not both at the same time.

Hope that helps.

T
 
bandphan

bandphan

Banned
the guys hit it for you, your pushing the load, do you have output for a second amp?
 
bandphan

bandphan

Banned
yes a pre out or tape out to run another amp to eliminate the load.
 
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