The multimeter measures the speaker’s impedance at zero Hz (i.e., DC). That reading will usually be significantly lower than the impedance at audible frequencies.
Not to worry!
Regards,
-- Al
Not to worry!
Regards,
-- Al
Measuring impedance with multimeter
While the Elac Debut B6 has a specified nominal impedance of 6 ohms, it can be seen in Stereophile’s measurements that its impedance is above 10 ohms at all frequencies above 500 Hz, and is above 20 ohms at almost all frequencies above 1 kHz! 6 ohms in this case is its minimum value at any frequency, which it reaches at 10 Hz (the lowest frequency they measure, which of course is not too far from the 0 Hz frequency at which your multimeter measurement was taken), and also around 200 Hz. IMO most manufacturers would have specified the nominal impedance of that speaker as being much higher than 6 ohms. Certainly at least 8 ohms, and perhaps 10 or 12 ohms or even more. Many variables affect the impedance of a speaker, and how that impedance may differ from what it is at DC, including the drivers, the crossover networks, the enclosure, and how the designer chooses to specify the impedance. I would ignore the 15 to 20% rules of thumb you mentioned reading about. Regards, -- Al |
Recluse, To be technically accurate, you're not measuring impedance with a multimeter. You're measuring resistance. Impedance applies to the resistance of an alternating signal. Also consider the thing you're measuring. A driver is an inductor placed inside a powerful magnetic field. Obviously it's got inductance that's going to resist higher frequencies. You're also moving wires back and forth inside a magnetic field. That generates electricity in itself that can drive impedance way up while rotating the phase angle around in weird ways depending on the mechanical properties of the driver and how it's enclosure loads it. Add into the mix the reactive nature of a passive crossover and there's a LOT of factors that contribute to the impedance of a functioning speaker. Multimeters are cheap. Audio Precision analyzers aren't. That's why. |
@recluse Here, read this: https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2016/12/crossover-basics-impedance.html |
Thanks for all of the explanations and links. For non EE types, what sort of equipment would be needed then to get a reasonably accurate measurement? This? https://www.vellemanstore.com/en/peak-lcr45-lcr-and-impedance-meter?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI6YXV-MP83wIVmY... Thanks in advance |
If you connect your speaker to a signal generator and run a frequency response graph for the entire audio spectrum (generally 20-20,000cps) you can see on the graph how the impedance varies quite a bit (from maybe a low point of 2ohm to a high of over 20ohm) over the frequency range. The mfgr of your speaker states it is 12ohm but that is an average of the low and high impedance shown on the graph. You should connect your speakers to the 8ohm outputs on your amplifier. |
Bsmg, as I stated in the prior post, the graph provided by the maker of the speaker never dips below 12 ohms over the entire frequency spectrum. And I never mentioned anything about what taps I have. So is there no instrument that can be acquired without breaking the bank for nonEE to broadly measure impedance, or in this hobby where snake oils are rampant does everyone blindly except vendor claims? Speakers are expensive and impedance matters ;-) |
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For non EE types, what sort of equipment would be needed then to get a reasonably accurate measurement?https://studiosixdigital.com/impedance-meter-and-sweep-v.html or http://audiojudgement.com/loudspeaker-impedance-measurement/ |
So is there no instrument that can be acquired without breaking the bank for nonEE to broadly measure impedance, or in this hobby where snake oils are rampant does everyone blindly except vendor claims?You need a sine wave generator and probably a 100 ohm potentiometer in addition to your meter. The sine wave generator drives the speaker, which is wired in series with the potentiometer; the latter only uses the center lead and one other lead. Set the meter to AC volts. You adjust the pot so that your meter reads the same voltage across the speaker terminals as the across the pot. Then remove the pot from the circuit and measure the DC resistance- that is the impedance of the speaker at that frequency. So you need to do this a bunch of times but with a bit of graph paper you can draw up the impedance curve. |
You can measure speaker impedance using Room EQ Wizard and a home made harness. https://www.roomeqwizard.com/help/help_en-GB/html/impedancemeasurement.html I personally recommend DATS V2 as a complete, out of the box solution: http://www.daytonaudio.com/index.php/dats-dayton-audio-test-system.html Around $99 at Parts Express |
As said above, the 'resistance' that you measure with your ohm meter is in DC, i.e. direct current. Impedance is an entirely different measurement that uses an alternating current (The music signal happens to be just that, AC). It might like understanding the horsepower of a car. The stated horsepower isn't exactly what you will be experiencing in driving, at least considering differing speeds, roads, driving habits, etc. It gives a baseline for you to consider. |