I have a cousin who comes up with some unique ideas and he's come up with one that I've never heard of.
He thinks you get better sound if you hook up a single speaker to the left channel output of the A speaker outputs of a receiver and another identical speaker to the right channel output of the B speaker outputs of the receiver. To reiterate: one pair of speakers, one of them hooked to the left channel of the A speaker outputs and the other speaker hooked to the right channel of the B speaker outputs. Both A and B outputs are turned on.
It doesn't sound any better as far as I can tell and I don't know why it would theoretically sound any better, but I'm more concerned about whether this might potentially damage the receiver to have it driving only one channel of each of the sets of outputs.
What do you think?
I have a cousin who comes up with some unique ideas and he's come up with one that I've never heard of.
He thinks you get better sound if you hook up a single speaker to the left channel output of the A speaker outputs of a receiver and another identical speaker to the right channel output of the B speaker outputs of the receiver. To reiterate: one pair of speakers, one of them hooked to the left channel of the A speaker outputs and the other speaker hooked to the right channel of the B speaker outputs. Both A and B outputs are turned on.
It doesn't sound any better as far as I can tell and I don't know why it would theoretically sound any better, but I'm more concerned about whether this might potentially damage the receiver to have it driving only one channel of each of the sets of outputs.
What do you think?