Why do speaker manufacturers put it in the specs when you can possibly drive anything with 1000wt of clean power?
Speaker wattage question
I'm new here, so I hope I'm posting this in the appropriate forum.
I am running KEF LS50's with a Parasound Integrated amp. The amp is rated at 165 WPC @ 8 ohms. The speakers are rated for 25-100 watts (and are possibly lower than 8 ohms according to some sources).
If pushed, do I risk damaging a driver, or will I simply get clipping?
Any help appreciated and please pardon my ignorance on something I'm sure is common knowledge.
I am running KEF LS50's with a Parasound Integrated amp. The amp is rated at 165 WPC @ 8 ohms. The speakers are rated for 25-100 watts (and are possibly lower than 8 ohms according to some sources).
If pushed, do I risk damaging a driver, or will I simply get clipping?
Any help appreciated and please pardon my ignorance on something I'm sure is common knowledge.
- ...
- 26 posts total
inna2,182 posts08-11-2016 5:49pmWhy do speaker manufacturers put it in the specs when you can possibly drive anything with 1000wt of clean power? Inna, i think that you misunderstood. You can drive any speaker with 1000W/ch but it does not mean that you can crank up the volume indefinitely. If you do, you will fry the tweeter & eventually the woofer. So, you can use a 1000W/ch amp, just be careful of where the volume knob is & do not exceed the manuf's speaker wattage upper limit. it's not so much about "clean" power i.e. just because it's clean it wont damage the speaker. No, not true. |
@inna The SPL at a listening location is a function of the speaker sensitivity, room acoustics and distance from the source. You could measure the SPL at 2.83 volts (1w/8 ohms) with the mic at the listening location and then do math from there if you really wanted to. :) Divide your maximum RMS voltage by 2.83 and convert to dB. Add this to the SPL measured at the listening location and voila, you have your maximum SPL. |
innawhat erik_squires wrote is correct. Another method to do the calculation is as follows (you'll find this in several other of my posts in other Audiogon threads): Say, your speaker is 90dB SPL at 1W, 1m & your speaker is 8 Ohms. Since it's 8 ohms we are sure that 2.83Vrms into 8 ohms produces 1W of input power. The SPL with drop by square of the distance from the speaker. So, if you are listening at 3m (~10' away), the resulting SPL = 81dB. There is approx 3db loss due to furniture, curtains, carpet, walls absorption. There is a 3dB increase due to listening in stereo. So, the absorption & stereo effects essentially cancel out. You have 81dB SPL at 3m using 1W. you have 91dB SPL at 3m using 10W. you have 101dB SPL at 3m using 100W. you have 104dB SPL at 3m using 200W. you have 111dB SPL at 3m using 1000W. using the metric above & your RadioShack SPL meter you can gauge when you have reached the 200W mark approximately (pretty decent approximation). Does this make sense? |
- 26 posts total