since someone mentioned it, i'll take a moment to deal with it..... in public..
the resistor across speaker to fool the amp thing.
the problem with this is three fold really..
1) a Speaker is not a straight resistor, it's a reactive load, the impedance it presents to the amp varies with frequency (and power )
so while it may nominally be say 2 Ohms at 1KHz, it maybe 4 Ohms at 15Khz, and 2.5 Ohms at 65 Hz , or some other such nonsense... (figures here are entirely made up to illustrate a point, not pulled from actual data on the system)
the trouble here is that with only a nominal 2 Ohms as the starting point, , ANY measurable variance is quite large with respect to the nominal average...
2) A resistor, is NOT a reactive load, it's broadly flat line , (*at audio frequencies anyhow) and does not present any back thrust to the amplifier.... whereas the moving coil of the driver does.... as it moves around in the magnetic field due to the drive signal, it in turn generates current by the same process...
thus , slapping a straight resistor across a higher impedance speaker in parallel, to "fool" the amp, changes how the speaker reacts to input.... and the impedance presented, and frequency response sensitivity changes....
so, the only way to do it, is to build a dummy reactive load, with the appropriate impedance characteristics to compensate correctly across the required audio bandwidth, , and present the the amplifier with the drive load it is expecting.... at all frequencies..
of course doing so, wastes a significant portion of the power the amplifier is putting in to the system, and you end up with a lower maximum volume....
the complication here , is that since the Bose system, as i understand it, is response compensated for volume... this may result in a very odd spectral balance
there are still ways to cheat a bit further, but it potentially gets increasingly complex , and still may not be a perfect result...
3) 2 Ohm drivers use a thicker voice coil winding wire , and have a different motor mass , making the transient response different from an otherwise identical driver (say a 4 Ohm or 8 Ohm coil, using the same cone and spider assembly.. ) and their efficiency is also different... (dB/W) , this is not really something that can be compensated for in a parallel reactive load....
with all that in mind, it is potentially cheaper and quicker to find a source of new replacement 2 Ohm drivers for those users who want to keep their Bose rigs, but have failing , biodegrading drivers...
that said, i still fancy having a play with the idea.... seeing if i can get the relevant performance parameter specs for the original drivers, and a range of alternatives, and if it's possible to calculate a compensatory reactive load that would use commonly available cheapish components.... the moment you start needing custom wound components, it becomes financially silly..... but IF that's all possible, seeing how well it performs....
the suspicion Dave and i share, is that it's not feasible in a practical reality, and certainly not for the average DIY miggy owner.
my interest is largely theoretical, rather than any urgent need.... my car is non bose, so i can change drivers any time i like.....