So Yamaha puts all these spots to plug in speakers but its not good to do so ? Or are they there more for surround sound speakers ?
The surround speakers are run off of a different ąmp, and so they may be considered separately. With the main A and B speakers, they are run off the same ąmp, and so they must be factored together. Given the fact that 16 ohm speakers are pretty rare these days, having a second terminal is basically allowing you to hook up two sets of speakers at the same time, but not allowing you to listen to both at the same time (at least not most speakers, particularly at high volume for an extended period of time). This could be useful if you have one pair of speakers in one room, and another pair of speakers in another room, and you switch on whichever speakers are appropriate for the room that you are going to be in, and have the ones off for the room that you will not be in.
I am bummed and will probably chub up some $$ for a new receiver and put this one in my garage or another room with some surround sound.
Most receivers are not set up for low impedance speakers. If your receiver has preąmp outputs (which, from looking at the manual that I downloaded from Yamaha's web site, it does), your best bet is to buy a separate power ąmp that can handle low impedances, or simply another ąmp to drive one set of speakers if hooking up something to the preąmp/line level main/front output does not disable the internal main ąmp.
I did not read the whole manual, though you might wish to do so before deciding what to buy. Or, you can do a very simple test, and simply plug a wire into the preąmp outputs, with the other end connected to nothing, and see if it shuts off the main speakers. If not, then you just need an amplifier capable of dealing with one set of the speakers at a time rather than low impedances. You would then hook up one set of speakers to the Yamaha you have, and the other to whatever ąmp/receiver you buy, preferably with a volume control, so that you can set the balance any way you like between both sets of speakers.
If you need something to drive them all, a professional power ąmp is probably the cheapest way to get lots of power for low impedances, but make sure that whatever you get has the right sort of connections that you can use.
Bottom line is, I want to run 4 speakers when I want to. Will the different ohms of the two brands be a problem with every receiver I would buy.
Not necessarily, but I recommend buying a separate ąmp instead to deal with your issue.
And it isn't a problem that they are different impedances; the problem is, the combined impedance is too low for your receiver to handle at high volume for long periods of time.