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#201
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Subwoofer Output Question
unitron wrote: (Svante) wrote in message . com... The thing is, a driver doesn't convert the electrical power to anything but heat and most of it ends up in the voice coil for any signal. The heat comes about of fuor main reasons: If a driver doesn't convert the electrical power to anything but heat, then it's not converting any of it to mechanical motion, that is, it isn't moving the cone back and forth. If this were true, it wouldn't be a speaker, it would be a dummy load. Proportionally he is saying the speaker is very inefficient, so that the added amount of heat would be fractionally small. If the changes in the signal are happening so fast that it can't keep up it's sort of a locked rotor situation, which electrically looks kind of like a shorted turn in a coil. One might think it would be the opposite, since it is a coil. The Z of the coil would go up with f. But no matter if it is a "short" or an "open," neither one is capable of dissipating energy. The energy would simply reflect off the short or open and get dissipated in the amp and wires instead. In a less ideal world, the dissipation is probably spread across all the system elements (amp/wire/speaker). I don't know why there is such a concern with this small fractional amount. |
#202
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-10, citronzx wrote: I'm not sure why you think that a square wave will do damage to a speaker but you are wrong. If you have a signal generator try playing a square wave into a speaker for as long as you like and you will find that it causes no damage. Think about it, what you are saying is that a coil of wire will be damaged by an AC signal if the signal varies in a particular way. This is silly of course as long as the power level is resonable for the speaker. Oh, and I would like to see you graph a signal where a DC signal has any sort of "edge." Sorry brother but you seem confused. the speaker itself is not damaged by the dc component. the problem is the transient from the sine to dc component, since it contains a lot more energy in high frequencies. and what happens nesxt is that a lot more energy than normal goes to tweeters, and they can not withstand it, so they burn out. -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#203
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-10, citronzx wrote: I'm not sure why you think that a square wave will do damage to a speaker but you are wrong. If you have a signal generator try playing a square wave into a speaker for as long as you like and you will find that it causes no damage. Think about it, what you are saying is that a coil of wire will be damaged by an AC signal if the signal varies in a particular way. This is silly of course as long as the power level is resonable for the speaker. Oh, and I would like to see you graph a signal where a DC signal has any sort of "edge." Sorry brother but you seem confused. the speaker itself is not damaged by the dc component. the problem is the transient from the sine to dc component, since it contains a lot more energy in high frequencies. and what happens nesxt is that a lot more energy than normal goes to tweeters, and they can not withstand it, so they burn out. -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#204
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-10, citronzx wrote: I'm not sure why you think that a square wave will do damage to a speaker but you are wrong. If you have a signal generator try playing a square wave into a speaker for as long as you like and you will find that it causes no damage. Think about it, what you are saying is that a coil of wire will be damaged by an AC signal if the signal varies in a particular way. This is silly of course as long as the power level is resonable for the speaker. Oh, and I would like to see you graph a signal where a DC signal has any sort of "edge." Sorry brother but you seem confused. the speaker itself is not damaged by the dc component. the problem is the transient from the sine to dc component, since it contains a lot more energy in high frequencies. and what happens nesxt is that a lot more energy than normal goes to tweeters, and they can not withstand it, so they burn out. -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#205
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-10, citronzx wrote: I'm not sure why you think that a square wave will do damage to a speaker but you are wrong. If you have a signal generator try playing a square wave into a speaker for as long as you like and you will find that it causes no damage. Think about it, what you are saying is that a coil of wire will be damaged by an AC signal if the signal varies in a particular way. This is silly of course as long as the power level is resonable for the speaker. Oh, and I would like to see you graph a signal where a DC signal has any sort of "edge." Sorry brother but you seem confused. the speaker itself is not damaged by the dc component. the problem is the transient from the sine to dc component, since it contains a lot more energy in high frequencies. and what happens nesxt is that a lot more energy than normal goes to tweeters, and they can not withstand it, so they burn out. -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#206
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-11, Lucy Explainin wrote: "Svante" wrote in message om... "G M" wrote in message ... "Nope. The problem with clipping amplifiers is mainly that the spectral content of the signal is shifted towards higher frequencies as the signal is clipped, and also that the dynamics of the signal is lost." So if we put a 1v 150hz sine wave with nearly no harmonics into and amplifier and then on to a speaker and push it to cliping you are saying that a bass driver will not burn its coil out - yes? the bass driver wont, the tweeter wil, because more power is going to tweeter instead of bass unit. "and the tweeter burns." Why? If it's within it's power rating and is just getting a nasty clipped harmic top end signal why would this be so? what power rating? in any speaker, tweeter is rated 2-3 times lower than the bass driver. they both make speaker power rating, but they are not the same. in normal signa, the ratio is about 70% bass and 30% highs. in clipped signal it can be reversed - 70% of the signal goes to tweeter, and 30% to bass. guess which one will burn? -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#207
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-11, Lucy Explainin wrote: "Svante" wrote in message om... "G M" wrote in message ... "Nope. The problem with clipping amplifiers is mainly that the spectral content of the signal is shifted towards higher frequencies as the signal is clipped, and also that the dynamics of the signal is lost." So if we put a 1v 150hz sine wave with nearly no harmonics into and amplifier and then on to a speaker and push it to cliping you are saying that a bass driver will not burn its coil out - yes? the bass driver wont, the tweeter wil, because more power is going to tweeter instead of bass unit. "and the tweeter burns." Why? If it's within it's power rating and is just getting a nasty clipped harmic top end signal why would this be so? what power rating? in any speaker, tweeter is rated 2-3 times lower than the bass driver. they both make speaker power rating, but they are not the same. in normal signa, the ratio is about 70% bass and 30% highs. in clipped signal it can be reversed - 70% of the signal goes to tweeter, and 30% to bass. guess which one will burn? -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#208
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-11, Lucy Explainin wrote: "Svante" wrote in message om... "G M" wrote in message ... "Nope. The problem with clipping amplifiers is mainly that the spectral content of the signal is shifted towards higher frequencies as the signal is clipped, and also that the dynamics of the signal is lost." So if we put a 1v 150hz sine wave with nearly no harmonics into and amplifier and then on to a speaker and push it to cliping you are saying that a bass driver will not burn its coil out - yes? the bass driver wont, the tweeter wil, because more power is going to tweeter instead of bass unit. "and the tweeter burns." Why? If it's within it's power rating and is just getting a nasty clipped harmic top end signal why would this be so? what power rating? in any speaker, tweeter is rated 2-3 times lower than the bass driver. they both make speaker power rating, but they are not the same. in normal signa, the ratio is about 70% bass and 30% highs. in clipped signal it can be reversed - 70% of the signal goes to tweeter, and 30% to bass. guess which one will burn? -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
#209
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Subwoofer Output Question
["Followup-To:" header set to alt.music.makers.dj.]
On 2004-02-11, Lucy Explainin wrote: "Svante" wrote in message om... "G M" wrote in message ... "Nope. The problem with clipping amplifiers is mainly that the spectral content of the signal is shifted towards higher frequencies as the signal is clipped, and also that the dynamics of the signal is lost." So if we put a 1v 150hz sine wave with nearly no harmonics into and amplifier and then on to a speaker and push it to cliping you are saying that a bass driver will not burn its coil out - yes? the bass driver wont, the tweeter wil, because more power is going to tweeter instead of bass unit. "and the tweeter burns." Why? If it's within it's power rating and is just getting a nasty clipped harmic top end signal why would this be so? what power rating? in any speaker, tweeter is rated 2-3 times lower than the bass driver. they both make speaker power rating, but they are not the same. in normal signa, the ratio is about 70% bass and 30% highs. in clipped signal it can be reversed - 70% of the signal goes to tweeter, and 30% to bass. guess which one will burn? -- Tech Support: "I need you to boot the computer." Customer: (THUMP! Pause.) "No, that didn't help." |
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