^^ to clarify, its not about orientation.
Sensitivity is 2.83 Volts at 1 meter
Efficiency is 1 Watt at 1 meter
If the speaker is 8 ohms, they are the same.
Now imagine a speaker with 90 db sensitivity.
If the speaker is 4 ohms, the speaker will have and efficiency rating of 3 db less. This is because to make 2.83 volts, 2 Watts will be required, IOW you need double the power and doubling the power is 3 db.
If the speaker is 16 ohms, it will have 3 db more efficiency as you only need 1/2 watt to make 2.83 Volts.
Under the Voltage Paradigm, the amp that is a Voltage Source will have variable power output as the speaker load changes. This is useful in a box speaker, where there can be a big impedance peak in the bass due to box resonance with the woofer. The peak throttles back the power and so the bass is not boomy.
(The problem here is that this rule mostly applies to some box speakers. For example it does not work so well with ESLs.)
Under the Power Paradigm you would design the speaker so that the impedance peak was occurring below the woofer cutoff. This would then take advantage of the amplifier's ability to put out the same or possibly more power into the higher impedance. This can easily win another 1/2 octave of response out of the speaker.
The Efficiency rating has been around for well over 60 years. The Sensitivity rating is newer, having been introduced in the 1980s. The Efficiency rating is an artifact of the Power Paradigm, the Sensitivity rating is an artifact of the Voltage Paradigm.
Two different approaches, both with strengths and weaknesses, and their own sets of followers. The industry generally does not talk about this, and the result is confusion; hence the equipment matching conversation, of which this thread is an example.
Sensitivity is 2.83 Volts at 1 meter
Efficiency is 1 Watt at 1 meter
If the speaker is 8 ohms, they are the same.
Now imagine a speaker with 90 db sensitivity.
If the speaker is 4 ohms, the speaker will have and efficiency rating of 3 db less. This is because to make 2.83 volts, 2 Watts will be required, IOW you need double the power and doubling the power is 3 db.
If the speaker is 16 ohms, it will have 3 db more efficiency as you only need 1/2 watt to make 2.83 Volts.
Under the Voltage Paradigm, the amp that is a Voltage Source will have variable power output as the speaker load changes. This is useful in a box speaker, where there can be a big impedance peak in the bass due to box resonance with the woofer. The peak throttles back the power and so the bass is not boomy.
(The problem here is that this rule mostly applies to some box speakers. For example it does not work so well with ESLs.)
Under the Power Paradigm you would design the speaker so that the impedance peak was occurring below the woofer cutoff. This would then take advantage of the amplifier's ability to put out the same or possibly more power into the higher impedance. This can easily win another 1/2 octave of response out of the speaker.
The Efficiency rating has been around for well over 60 years. The Sensitivity rating is newer, having been introduced in the 1980s. The Efficiency rating is an artifact of the Power Paradigm, the Sensitivity rating is an artifact of the Voltage Paradigm.
Two different approaches, both with strengths and weaknesses, and their own sets of followers. The industry generally does not talk about this, and the result is confusion; hence the equipment matching conversation, of which this thread is an example.