Wiring 2 x 8 ohm speakers in series across the 16 ohm tap is what you are claiming to do.
Instead of shouting "wrong" and such, read more carefully what I said, try to comprehend what I said, and stop claiming what I do, ok?
Nobody with the slightest idea about speaker damping and best use of a 0-4-16 transformer would do it the way you claim me to do.
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Btw, still waiting for you to man up and either take back or provide proof for your silly statement regarding Broskie.
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Only fools go ad hominem like you have.But since you seem to have not yet understood what I said earlier, I will give you a example:
Suppose we have a transformer optimized for a load of either 4 or 16 ohm (0-4-16)
The transformer has 2 equal secondary windings winding ratio is 10:1+1
Disregarding Rdc,Rac, coupling and other minor influences
you can connect one 8 ohm load to 0-4 and the other to 4-16
Now, what happens if you load with 2 x 4 ohm instead of 2 x 8?
It's also not permitted on here.
Maybe you are struggling up there with English language in Finland, but it is you that hasn't understood.
Can you point me to anywhere where I suggested connecting TWO 4 ohm speakers to the TWO 4 ohm taps...??
I said nothing of the sort. I stated it would be TWO EIGHT OHM (see the figure 8?) to those 4 ohm taps.
After this point disregarding the entirely wrong and unreal argument that...
,Disregarding Rdc,Rac, coupling and other minor influences
I can prove with oscilloscope, DAC, DAW, and with proven methodology, that those so called
, are indeed very major influences on how a system sounds.minor influences
This is particularly true when you use 1 half winding for HF, and the other half for LF.
In this case the frequency dependent element becomes highly important and plays a role in the overall damping of the system.
As for the
stuff in your next comments, they are so utterly childish as to need no further comments. 😀man up