4 speaker question

PADave

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Apr 1, 2025
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Hello, I have an outdoor set-up with 4 speakers. The speakers are DefTechs and they are specified as "4-8 Ohm" and the sensitivity is 91dB. Is it advisable to use a WiiM Amp Pro or a WiiM Vibelink + streamer (like WiiM Mini) for this? I saw an unverified comment elsewhere that both amps would support 8 ohm speakers wired in parallel, but with the "4-8" ohm range I wasn't sure if that was copasetic. My hunch is that the Vibelink with the additional output power with 4 speakers connected is probably a better choice than the WiiM Amp Pro? However, I wasn't sure if there were limitations to the WiiM Mini in this situation vs a WiiM Amp Pro. Any advice appreciated.
 
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Welcome.

If you search for "ohm" by wiim support you should find a number of posts on this topic.
From those, I'd imagine wiim's position would probably be "not advisable", if only to err on the safe side.

Wiim also state that their amps have advanced heat management, which ought to mean the amps will not allow themselves to overheat if you push them too hard. Do you intend these speakers to be background music or party loud?

The wiim mini limitations come down to its reduced capabilities, such as no ethernet, no chromecast, no qobuz connect etc.

Of course, you could just get two amps ;)
 
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I'd be surprised if the vibelink's specs went much below, if at all, the 2.67 stated for the other amps, but I don't recall seeing this stated anywhere.

One additional thought on using a mini with a vibelink - the mini doesn't have trigger out and the vibelink power button is on the back. You either need to reach around there to turn it on or have bluetooth enabled on your device to turn it on from within the app.
Without a trigger, once the vibelink goes to sleep (or is turned off via the app) then it needs to be deliberately turned on in one of these two ways.
You can't turn its power off and on again (i.e. at the mains) 'cos it won't wake up when power comes back if it was asleep when the power went off.
 
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I'd be surprised if the vibelink's specs went much below, if at all, the 2.67 stated for the other amps, but I don't recall seeing this stated anywhere.
Not sure if it's found in the specs, but WiiM actually did confirm the 2.67 Ω minimum load for the WiiM Vibelink Amp as well. Personally I'd rather not recommend this combination, unless one can measure the actual impedance over frequency for the speakers in question.
 
I'd be surprised if the vibelink's specs went much below, if at all, the 2.67 stated for the other amps, but I don't recall seeing this stated anywhere.

One additional thought on using a mini with a vibelink - the mini doesn't have trigger out and the vibelink power button is on the back. You either need to reach around there to turn it on or have bluetooth enabled on your device to turn it on from within the app.
Without a trigger, once the vibelink goes to sleep (or is turned off via the app) then it needs to be deliberately turned on in one of these two ways.
You can't turn its power off and on again (i.e. at the mains) 'cos it won't wake up when power comes back if it was asleep when the power went off.
Thanks for the heads up on the trigger, I think in that case a WiiM Pro would work. I guess the other option is to wait for the Amp Ultra...
 
Not sure if it's found in the specs, but WiiM actually did confirm the 2.67 Ω minimum load for the WiiM Vibelink Amp as well. Personally I'd rather not recommend this combination, unless one can measure the actual impedance over frequency for the speakers in question.
Thanks, agreed it would be borderline at 2.67 if the speakers drift to 4 ohm. Looks like we'll go with two Amps or a different brand with 8 proper speaker terminals like a marantz 6007 fed by a WiiM streamer.
 
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Thanks, agreed it would be borderline at 2.67 if the speakers drift to 4 ohm. Looks like we'll go with two Amps or a different brand with 8 proper speaker terminals like a marantz 6007.
The advantage with multiple WiiM devices over a single multi-channel amp is that you don't have to route the speaker cables physically. You just place every WiiM amplifier in the "zone" where you need it and then group them by software.

If you intend to stuff everything in one big media closet anyway and already have cable ducts, that doesn't matter, of course.
 
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The advantage with multiple WiiM devices over a single multi-channel amp is that you don't have to route the speaker cables physically. You just place every WiiM amplifier in the "zone" where you need it and then group them by software.

If you intend to stuff everythin in one big media closet anyway and already have cable ducts, that doesn't matter, of course.
When we remodeled our house, I had all the speaker cables routed to a central location in the basement, so it's no problem. My biggest questions about a separate amp are whether going from a WiiM Pro Plus using the analog outputs to an amplifier introduces more unnecessary noise in the chain or alternatively using toslink from the WiiM to the amp whether the DACs in the lower cost amps are comparable to the WiiM (probably not), and last but not least the SQ of the amps themselves vs the WiiM amp pro.
 
@PADave
You mentioned possibly using a Pro in one post and a Pro Plus in another, and also wiim analog out vs digital out.
My opinion - if you think you'll use analog out then get a pro plus.
As for 'noise' using analog out - not in my experience.
 
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