How much DC is considered safe?


If you measure the DC voltage at the amp's speaker output terminals, how much DC is considered safe? I have a pair of monoblocks that I measured a maximum of -32mV on one amp, dropping to about -21mV on the other. Will this small amount of DC cause any harm to the speakers?
plato
Richard,

Thanks for that bit of knowledge; it makes sense to me. I remeasured the amps today after playing around with them a bit and now they both measure under 20mV. So it would appear that they will be safe enough to use. I will be in touch with the amp's designer next week when he returns from CES, and perhaps he will have more to say on the subject. Prior to my posting this question, he sent me a message not to connect my speakers to the amps if I measured more than 20mV of DC offset following a 10-minute warm-up period.

Dear Clueless, your sense of humor is appreciated and no offense is taken. I think that DC offset in small amounts will pull or push your speaker's diaphram/cone out of its neutral resting position, although that may not be audible in most cases, which is why you need to measure for it. Of course larger amounts of DC can act to destroy drivers. My measurements were taken at the amp's speaker posts while the speaker cables and interconnects were disconnected.

Have a great weekend guys!
see what happens when the amp inputs are shorted, this info might tell the manufacturer something useful when you talk to them. If you're not applying any signal (playing music) then there's no AC component to confuse the meter when you take this meassurement, which you do appear to be doing correctly. Any offset values >100mVDC I would really start being concerned, & the amp may even go into DC protect mode around that point.
Bob,

I tried your suggestion about using the input shorting plugs and retaking the measurements. Curiously, with the shorting plugs both amps measured 4 to 5 mV higher DC than without the plugs. I don't know why that should be, but it's what I got.