Yamaha RX-V1400 and LSi7 4 ohm Speakers?

RobXant
RobXant Posts: 201
edited September 2004 in Speakers
Hey All- anyone care to opine on the use of this fine 120w reciever with a set of Polk LSi7 (4ohm) bookshelf speakers? I am wondering if I am going to burn out the amp in my Yamaha trying to drive them with the rest of my surround sound system ((Polk RT4/CSi3) 8ohm stuff). I am about to get a set to replace the RT4s and just want to make sure I have enough power to run them well, and that I am not going to burn anything out.
Thanks for any insight-
Rob
Yamaha RX-V1500 // Outlaw Audio M200 (x2) Panasonic TH-52PZ700U
Sony DVP-NS715P // Sony Playstation3 // Roku Soundbridge M1000[/color]
Polk LSi15 (w/Monster Z2 Wire) // Polk LSiC // Polk LSi7 // Velodyne DLS-3500

Workshop Rig: Creek 4330 // Technics SL-P310 // Cambridge Soundworks Ensemble 2
Post edited by RobXant on

Comments

  • F1nut
    F1nut Posts: 50,731
    edited September 2004
    Check your owners manual to see if the receiver is rated to drive 4 ohm loads. If it isn't, then you don't want to drive the LSi's with it.
    Political Correctness'.........defined

    "A doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical minority and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a t-u-r-d by the clean end."


    President of Club Polk

  • hamzahsh
    hamzahsh Posts: 439
    edited September 2004
    I've the Yamaha RX-V1400 and it doesn't support 4OHM load according to the manual. The interesting thing is I've read some posts where 1 user wrote, he is running 1400 with SNELL 4 OHM Speakers without any problems at all.

    No problemo! Yamaha 1400 will do it for you. If you want to!

    Personally, If I were you I'll buy the AMP.
    Even though I use 8 OHM speakers I'm still running the AMPs. Amps do make the sound better.


    :)
    Panasonic TH-50PX80U Plasma HDTV
    Polk Audio RT800i (fronts)
    Polk Audio CS400i (center)
    Polk Audio F/X1000 (side surrounds)
    Polk Audio RTi6 (back surrrounds)
    Velodyne CHT-15 (subwoofer)
    Yamaha RX-V1400 (Pre/Pro)
    NAD C272 (2-ch Amp)
    Adcom GFA-7605 (5-ch Amp)
    Toshiba SD-3109 (DVD/CD player)
    Malata DVP-580 (Multi-region DVD player)
  • Mazeroth
    Mazeroth Posts: 1,585
    edited September 2004
    A thread on here a few months ago had a review of the LSi7s and an ohm test that concluded it is almost a nominal 8ohm load with the LSi7s. I wouldn't worry about it. You'll be fine; seriously. I had a set of LSi7s running off a $140 Sherwood 5.1 receiver that I got from Circuit City for my computer rig. Never got excessively warm.
  • RobXant
    RobXant Posts: 201
    edited September 2004
    OK- I see there are a few diferent views on this. I wonder if I am going to hear a real difference using these to replace a set of RT4s as front surrounds. Or, at least enough of one to justify running my reciever hard enough to drive them?
    thanks for all your help!
    Rob
    Yamaha RX-V1500 // Outlaw Audio M200 (x2) Panasonic TH-52PZ700U
    Sony DVP-NS715P // Sony Playstation3 // Roku Soundbridge M1000[/color]
    Polk LSi15 (w/Monster Z2 Wire) // Polk LSiC // Polk LSi7 // Velodyne DLS-3500

    Workshop Rig: Creek 4330 // Technics SL-P310 // Cambridge Soundworks Ensemble 2
  • Mjr7531
    Mjr7531 Posts: 856
    edited September 2004
    Originally posted by hamzahsh

    No problemo!
    Sorry, this is off topic, but, it's "Ningún Problema."

    Edited: Oops, I forgot the sign of good intention... :)
  • sowen010599
    sowen010599 Posts: 343
    edited September 2004
    120watts? Would that be the RX-V2400??

    A little known fact about THX certification...

    "THX Select certification ensures that it can hit a 105-decibel sound level in a room of up to 2,000 cubic feet when used with THX Select–certified speakers and remain stable when driving loads with impedances down to 3.2 ohms."

    So, yeah, 4 ohms is a non-issue with that model. In fact, the literature shows ratings all the way down to 2 ohms. You won't find it in the manual though. I read something somewhere about UL requiring there to be a switch on the unit to select 4 ohm. To satisfy that requirement, not having said switch, they only rate it to 6 ohm in the manual. Damn UL! And another thing, Gene DellaSala at Audioholics says to run the unit at the 8 ohm setting even with a 4 ohm load. Doing otherwise "steps down voltage feed to the power sections which can limit dynamics and overall fidelity."

    They show dynamic (no idea what RMS is other that the 8 ohm 120 watts) power ratings in the literature....

    8 ohms 155 watts
    6 ohms 195 watts
    4 ohms 260 watts
    2 ohms 330 watts

    I called Yamaha asking about this (I have the 2400). They said the unit will run stable all the way down to 2 ohms all day long with good ventilation. WOW! I about fell out of my chair.
    Go BIG or go home!
  • F1nut
    F1nut Posts: 50,731
    edited September 2004
    Hmmmmm......and all this time I thought THX was a new word for sucker.
    Political Correctness'.........defined

    "A doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical minority and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a t-u-r-d by the clean end."


    President of Club Polk

  • amulford
    amulford Posts: 5,020
    edited September 2004
    What do you mean by good ventilation? I'd be careful, in any case. If the Yammy is still under warranty, give it a go. If it ain't, tread lightly...
  • Sami
    Sami Posts: 4,634
    edited September 2004
    Any receiver that gets fried by running 4ohm loads is badly designed. It may shut itself down but it shouldn't fry.