I DON'T KNOW WHO YOU WERE TALKING TO BUT BOY ARE THEY CONFUSED. Speaker sensitivity is simply the amount of db's produced as a reference (usually 1 watt at 1 meter). What your amp kicks out are electrical watts (you know the RMS variety) while what's (sorry for the pun) coming out of your speaker are acoustic watts. Even a very powerful 200 watt amp may in fact only have a watt or two coming from a speaker, after the inevitable heat loss from electrical to mechanical. The wattage of your amp must be taken in context with your speaker sensitivity, how far you listen from, what kind of music and how loud? You are also confusing dynamic range with the decibel scale. The decibel scale is a fixed number, 70 db is always 70 db. Dynamic range is just the ratio of a quietest sound to a loudest sound (also called signal to noise ratio). Don't forget that power ratings double with a corresponding 3 db change. Therefore a 200 watt amp has twice the wattage of a 100 watt amp and is only 3 db louder, which is about the limits that you can detect by ear. I have thrown out some basic stuff out there as I am mainly a biology major. I'm sure some physics major or enginneer can add plenty more.
Speaker efficiency vs. power requirements
Recently someone gave me the "math" behind speaker efficiency ratings and power requirements. Although I am not sure if the information below is 100% accurate, it is what I have been told. Can we lay this on the table for discussion and try to resolve this confusing issue once and for all?
0 db is a power ratio of 1. Records and tape have dynamic ranges of 30-40db. To achieve a 30db dynamic range requires a power ratio of 1,000:1 and 40 db requires 10,000:1. So if you assign 1 watt of power to a speaker yielding 90db SPL, you need 1000 watts to deliver a true 30db dynamic range. With digital material we find dynamic ranges of 60-70db requiring power ratios of 1,000,000:1 & 10,000,000:1 respectively. Power amps of 1-10 million watts are not feasible today but the point is, more power offers more dynamic realism. Forget power vs. loudness because that really is not a factor in the overall scheme.
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- 13 posts total
- 13 posts total