So, I recently got my father's old Nikko amp from the 70's working again and would like to use it in my small apartment. I've also inherited 4 klipsch speakers from a friend (the amp that went with them died), which have a 6 ohm impedance.
On the back of the amp, there are two sets of stereo outputs, A and B. This way, you could have one set of speakers in the living room and one in the bedroom and switch output between the two sets. It says that the impedance range for each speaker is 4-16 ohms, so I'm okay there.
There is also an option to output to both sets of speakers simultaneously, and lists the impedance range to use both A+B simultaneously as 8-16 ohms, or above the 6 ohms of the Klipsch speakers I'd like to use.
Do I risk damaging anything if the impedance of the speakers is too low to run on A+B? The speakers are fairly small so I'd like to use all four of them.
On the back of the amp, there are two sets of stereo outputs, A and B. This way, you could have one set of speakers in the living room and one in the bedroom and switch output between the two sets. It says that the impedance range for each speaker is 4-16 ohms, so I'm okay there.
There is also an option to output to both sets of speakers simultaneously, and lists the impedance range to use both A+B simultaneously as 8-16 ohms, or above the 6 ohms of the Klipsch speakers I'd like to use.
Do I risk damaging anything if the impedance of the speakers is too low to run on A+B? The speakers are fairly small so I'd like to use all four of them.