Jim Salk told me his measurements were anechoic because in room measurements are meaningless. I do not know how he does those measurements. Not sure how he would access such a facility. If he calculated in "half space" as lonemountain indicated, I would expect he would have used that phrase. Puzzling.
Default standard for speaker "sensitivity" measurement listings? Anechoic? In-room? Other?
I’m researching speakers which will play nice with tube amps.
I recognize that a number of factors are at play, not least sensitivity and impedance. Too low an impedance dip and/or too many wild swings in the graph and they tube amps may find driving the speakers a challenge.
So...some companies list BOTH in-room and anechoic sensitivity for speakers. Others just say "sensitivity."
QUESTION: When a company ONLY lists “sensitivity” is it understood to mean in-room or anechoic? Or something else? Or is there no standard one can assume?
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- 17 posts total
- 17 posts total