@kijanki @almarg That author’s conclusions:
Why do you quote a paper that is all about square waves when we are talking about sine waves? This is most unscientific.
http://eznec.com/Amateur/RMS_Power.pdf
I encourage readers, if there are any left over this foolishness, to note all the waves in the picture are square waves. The value of Vp= 1.41 x Vrms applies to sine waves only. Not to square waves where the average is 0.5 and so is the RMS.
In this amateur, by its own name, paper, which is highly flawed. In the first step he aready has the average, is correct and done. However he wants to prove something odd. So he applies 1.414 to the already correct answer and gets a new answer which is incorrect.
If one stops for a moment and looks at a square wave with at flat top the average and the DC value are both 1/2 the peak. Just cut the wave in half and fill in the hole. Then you get a straight DC line. No problem. But with a sine wave as the voltage peaks and current peaks there is a lot of energy at the top. The use of root 2 or 1/ root 2 ONLY APPLIES TO SINE WAVES, not triangular, not square, not you mothers fancy stiching.
TRUE RMS meters actually measure the heating value of nonperodic waves and can even tell you the RMS or heating value of music. That heating value is important to your woofer.
So far the author has supported his position with a flawed page from Wickipedia (flawed in their estimation also) and this paper on square waves. There is no point in going further with this.
Stating there is no such thing as RMS power is a bold statemtent that has uncountable support for the fact that RMS is real, useful and applies to amplifiers.
I did find today a mistake in the authors early math and will present the correct math, I dont know why this author wants to press this most unreasonable theory.
As to the authors commment Al (he wont get it) and( he didnt get it.) Rudely said but true. I dont get what you said and I dont know what engineer would.
http://www.n4lcd.com/RMS.pdf
This is interesting and if all we are actually arguing about is the term "RMS" then we have made a mess of things. Putting the term "RMS" in front of watts is a misnomer. Once you have watts you just have watts. There are no other kind of watts for continuous waves so AVERAGE watts does not apply either. Its just WATTS, AC, DC, any periodic constant value. The RMS I believe is to show that the watts were measured by RMS methods, not peak or peak to peak methods.
Perhaps we have argued over nothing but 3 letters of the alphabet, however the OP has cited papers that are incorrect and certainly have muddied the water. Heres you out guys:)
We still have to agree on one thing. The heating watts of a 100 watt amplifier is 100 watts. It is measured by V rms sq/R load.
The Peak watts is 200 and there are no other meaningful numbers to be stated. Using RMS to mean 'Hey anything with RMS in front of it gets to be multiplied by 1.4"... is a no no.
Average watts is generally applied to a signal that is non constant and thus an average is needed. Average is not appplicable to measuring sine waves for power. In fact the average squared comes up low.
It should be noted that the term “RMS power” is (mis)used in the consumer audio industry. In that context, it means the average power when reproducing a single tone, but it’s not actually the RMS value of the power.
Summary:
I’ve shown that:
-- The equivalent heating power of a waveform is the average power.
-- The RMS power is different than the average power, and therefore isn’t the equivalent heating power. In fact, the RMS value of the power doesn’t represent anything useful.
--The RMS values of voltage and current are useful because they can be used to calculate the average power.
Why do you quote a paper that is all about square waves when we are talking about sine waves? This is most unscientific.
http://eznec.com/Amateur/RMS_Power.pdf
I encourage readers, if there are any left over this foolishness, to note all the waves in the picture are square waves. The value of Vp= 1.41 x Vrms applies to sine waves only. Not to square waves where the average is 0.5 and so is the RMS.
In this amateur, by its own name, paper, which is highly flawed. In the first step he aready has the average, is correct and done. However he wants to prove something odd. So he applies 1.414 to the already correct answer and gets a new answer which is incorrect.
If one stops for a moment and looks at a square wave with at flat top the average and the DC value are both 1/2 the peak. Just cut the wave in half and fill in the hole. Then you get a straight DC line. No problem. But with a sine wave as the voltage peaks and current peaks there is a lot of energy at the top. The use of root 2 or 1/ root 2 ONLY APPLIES TO SINE WAVES, not triangular, not square, not you mothers fancy stiching.
TRUE RMS meters actually measure the heating value of nonperodic waves and can even tell you the RMS or heating value of music. That heating value is important to your woofer.
So far the author has supported his position with a flawed page from Wickipedia (flawed in their estimation also) and this paper on square waves. There is no point in going further with this.
Stating there is no such thing as RMS power is a bold statemtent that has uncountable support for the fact that RMS is real, useful and applies to amplifiers.
I did find today a mistake in the authors early math and will present the correct math, I dont know why this author wants to press this most unreasonable theory.
As to the authors commment Al (he wont get it) and( he didnt get it.) Rudely said but true. I dont get what you said and I dont know what engineer would.
http://www.n4lcd.com/RMS.pdf
This is interesting and if all we are actually arguing about is the term "RMS" then we have made a mess of things. Putting the term "RMS" in front of watts is a misnomer. Once you have watts you just have watts. There are no other kind of watts for continuous waves so AVERAGE watts does not apply either. Its just WATTS, AC, DC, any periodic constant value. The RMS I believe is to show that the watts were measured by RMS methods, not peak or peak to peak methods.
Perhaps we have argued over nothing but 3 letters of the alphabet, however the OP has cited papers that are incorrect and certainly have muddied the water. Heres you out guys:)
We still have to agree on one thing. The heating watts of a 100 watt amplifier is 100 watts. It is measured by V rms sq/R load.
The Peak watts is 200 and there are no other meaningful numbers to be stated. Using RMS to mean 'Hey anything with RMS in front of it gets to be multiplied by 1.4"... is a no no.
Average watts is generally applied to a signal that is non constant and thus an average is needed. Average is not appplicable to measuring sine waves for power. In fact the average squared comes up low.