Ernie: That is a good point about "optimistic" specs from manufacturers. I think that Klipsch did just that with their RB-5's. From what i can remember, they claimed something like 95 - 96 dB's and they actually measured more like 91 - 92 dB's ( give or take ). While 91 - 92 dB's for a small bookshelf type speaker is a pretty respectable level of output, NO amount of break-in or "test procedure differences" could account for the 3 - 5 dB difference in rated specs vs measured performance in my book.
Then again, many people do not realize that speakers can and do play louder after the drivers are fully broken in. The stiff suspension due to a driver being new reduces both excursion capabilities and therefore reduces output. As such, a driver should really be used under normal conditions for a good period of time before actually trying to "spec" it. New "out of the box" figures will rarely jive with what one ends up with after a good amount of actual use on a pair of speakers. I have seen JA state similar things and even mention that he didn't think that the speaker was fully "broken in" when taking measurements, but he did test and publish the results just the same.
As far as your comments go about comparing speakers with "equivalent" sensitivity ratings, tonal balance / frequency response can drastically affect what we perceive to be "apparent volume". That is why i said that the sensitivity should be rated and averaged over a BROAD frequency spectrum, as this approach would tend to minimize differences in readings where one speaker was very peaky in specific areas and another was pretty even across the band.
Too bad "audio standards" really aren't "standardized". Sean
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Then again, many people do not realize that speakers can and do play louder after the drivers are fully broken in. The stiff suspension due to a driver being new reduces both excursion capabilities and therefore reduces output. As such, a driver should really be used under normal conditions for a good period of time before actually trying to "spec" it. New "out of the box" figures will rarely jive with what one ends up with after a good amount of actual use on a pair of speakers. I have seen JA state similar things and even mention that he didn't think that the speaker was fully "broken in" when taking measurements, but he did test and publish the results just the same.
As far as your comments go about comparing speakers with "equivalent" sensitivity ratings, tonal balance / frequency response can drastically affect what we perceive to be "apparent volume". That is why i said that the sensitivity should be rated and averaged over a BROAD frequency spectrum, as this approach would tend to minimize differences in readings where one speaker was very peaky in specific areas and another was pretty even across the band.
Too bad "audio standards" really aren't "standardized". Sean
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