Re: Small questions that don't fit anywhere

2845
four_oclocker_2.2 wrote: Thu Feb 12, 2026 4:42 pm That said, most of the amps I have run at 4 ohms (Ampeg SVT, Traynor YBA-3.) Am I going to damage anything with the amps having them be mis-matched? My assumption is no, though they may be less efficient.
Basically correct but read below....

tallchris wrote: Thu Feb 12, 2026 5:33 pm The rhyme I heard, which of course could be totally wrong, to remember impedance mistmaching:

"4 into 8, totally great/8 into 4, pay a whole lot more"
Not fully correct and if anything its the opposite, though both will be fine. Generally one increment up or down is okay. 4Ω amp into 8Ω cab is fine, but 8Ω amp into 4Ω cab is also fine. Its where you make jumps bigger than one standard increment that it becomes more problematic (i.e. a 4Ω amp into a 16Ω cab).

Here's a good summary from one site:
- If speaker impedance is higher than amp impedance, the amp can’t give away all its power. Part of it gets reflected back into the amps output transformer, heating it up. If speaker impedance is much higher than amp impedance (infinite for nothing connected), all power gets reflected back into the amp causing serious damage to the output transformer.

- If speaker impedance is lower than amp impedance, the amp needs to work harder to get the same output level as with an impedance match. Since a tube-amp is limited to how much power it can give, it can never damage itself. The tubes get worn out faster (since they have to work harder) and the amp won’t seem to be as loud as with an impedance match.
And here's a much more in-depth explanation from a more trusted source, for those that want to get technical.
Website: http://ballseffects.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetonyballs/

Re: Small questions that don't fit anywhere

2850
Single coils, shielding, and RF/EMI hauntings:

My studio seems to have a power transformer outside it. My single coil playing friends struggle to play gainy stuff. If you rotate your body the hum changes, there are okayish directions and awful ones.

My buddy's old tele was copper taped to high heaven, pickguard, pickup cavity and was much quieter.

Here's a probably dumb idea. If I were to copper foil a large sheet of cardboard and mount it on a mic stand or music stand and place it in front of a guitar could it reduce the interference by any significant amount?

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