the law is current times voltage equals power. in the case of speakers, all a voice coil is, is an inductor used as a motor. for inductors, the larger the current, the stronger the magnectic field. voltage isn't really that important when it comes to pushing a speakers. the higher the current, the more powerfull the electromagnetic field is. high voltage has its advantage, it saves a lot of power, but for subwoofers, high current wins hands down. when looking at amplifier specs, people don't know what to look for, power equals watts, but peak doesn't equal rms, the difference between regular amplifiers and high current amplifiers, is that, regular amplifiers us more voltage in the equation then current (which is like 50volts times 2amps= 100watts when you could use 10volts times 10amps to get the same power but create a stronger magnetic feild), when it is current that is pushing the relitive motion of the induction (voice coil). but another thing is, voltage is what pushes your current through, and with out that voltage, no current would flow, voltage in equals voltage out, and all voltage is, is electronic pressure.
Amplifiers: High Current? High Voltage?
I've seen alot of mention about current-based and voltage-based amplifiers, and I am confused. I thought all amplifiers recreated the wave form by varying voltage, and their interaction with the speaker (and the impedence characteristics between the two) dictate what current is drawn. I understand that the power supply of some amplifiers is less current restricted than others, but my (current) understanding also says that all amplifiers work by controlling voltage. Is there really such a thing as an amplifier that controls current rather than voltage?
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- 13 posts total
- 13 posts total