From your Manual 4 ohm support ..
Hi everyone I have a new 5.1 speaker set, all 4 ohms and an RX 1800 . I am hoping someone can help me out because I don't know if this reciever will support the load. I really don't understand the impedence of the speakers vs the watts per channel of the amp. I was told when I bought the speakers that the amp would drive them no problem because it is a high current amp.
Thanks for any insight.
I just downloaded and checked you manual.
By the way anyone can download Yamaha manuals after a free registration with you name and email address.
Page 10 of quickstart says you can use 4 ohm speakers see page 117.
Page 117 says to set at 6 Ohm and front speakers can be 4 ohm and other speakers can be 6 ohm.
However, in reality you have a
very substantial AVR in the Yamaha RX-V1800 rated at 130 RMS iinto 8 ohms.
And most AVR manuals are very conservative. When you switch to a setting other than 8 ohms , such as 6 ohms, basically you areputting na internal 2 ohm resistance in series with your circuit and you are reducing your effective power output. The purpose of the 6 ohm setting is not to enhance your HT system but more of a protection to your AVR.
Running at the 6 ohm setting should work, but your power will be reduced by 25% ( you probably won't notice it). Or you could run at 8 ohms and everything will work unless you turn up your AVR to max or very high volume settings.
Remember power = voltage * current = voltage ^2/ resistance
You need twice as much power (RMS) to run into a 4 ohm speaker as opposed to an 8 ohm speaker.
Using the max of 130 RMS = voltage^2 /resistance=8 ohms => voltage= 32 volts , current= 4 amps
Assuming current limitation ,running 4 ohms = max=22.8 volts then amps = 91 RMS still very good! So you could go up to 91/130 = 70% of maximum volume. At full -volume into 4 ohms you would get acurrent of 8 amperes and a total power requirement of 260RMS; trying to run this would trip the AVR protective circuitry.