why wouldnt the bose amps work with aftermarket speakers?
This is a Bad Thing. Bose does wacky proprietary stuff like use different impedence speakers and power levels. If you want to run a combination of Bose/non-Bose stuff, you really need to get the proper adapter to avoid blowing your stuff up.
The Bose speakers (just the speaker, not the amp) are 1 ohm (I measured it). Nominal impedance for auto speakers are 4 ohms. There is no electrical reason why you can't replace the Bose drivers (raw speaker) with higher resistance speakers. It just may not sound quite right.
thats what i was thinking....
just cause the bose speaker was 1 ohm...why wouldnt the amp power a normal speaker.... i just dont want the speaker to fry in 6months...
the bose amp is an amp...and has no impedence...therefore i feel it should work correctly with other speakers... and if it does sound right...i think i have a bonus of watts to each speaker and therefore i dont have to buy another amp
i hope
the bose amp is an amp...and has no impedence...therefore i feel it should work correctly with other speakers... and if it does sound right...i think i have a bonus of watts to each speaker and therefore i dont have to buy another amp

i hope
Since the amp is designed to run at 1 ohm, running it at 4 ohms will yield about 1/4 of the normal wattage, so you're losing a lot. But then the sensitivity of the speakers plays a part, so you might make some of the loss back.
Additional Bose info on stereo, speakers, amplifiers, etc.
I found some additional info on the BOSE stereos from a BOSE engineer, and I've put in the following post. It might be useful to further explain their products.
https://maxima.org/forums/showthread...threadid=12677
https://maxima.org/forums/showthread...threadid=12677
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jerrod99_se-l
4th Generation Classifieds (1995-1999)
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Aug 27, 2015 08:27 PM




