12/14/2005 11:04:49 PM
I'll post a larger reply later, but its obvious now that 1CYPHER was dead wrong. Now that he posted his "secret" reason that everyone was supposedly over looking, some others pretending to be an authority should catch why.I'd also like him to try and flame me some more about how wrong or ambiguous I am with some real reason behind it. This comment is the best though:
12/14/2005 11:10:04 PM
When do classes start back? I need something to do with my free time other than this.
12/14/2005 11:26:15 PM
Wow, a few posts were added when I was making my last reply. This is classic....First you post:
12/14/2005 11:58:51 PM
i think you should power all 4 speakers with 75 watts each. How big is your car? Care about your passengers? 75 watts RMS is more than sufficient for components inside a car.
12/15/2005 12:33:35 AM
I'll probably end up trying both methods, I suppose.
12/15/2005 8:30:30 AM
are you going to be entering in competitions? nodo you want clean, crisp sound with the ability to play loud if you want it to? yesdo you really care about soundstaging and imaging? nouse the amp to power all your speakers. the reason i suggest this is the polks put out very little bass. you will benefit from the extra power going to the 6x9s to give you the low fill in case you dont want to run a sub. plus, with the polk's sensitivity rating, they won't require that much power to sound the best. hell, the tweeters are already ear piercing as is running off a head unit.
12/15/2005 5:43:57 PM
really? well I do have a sub im putting in....considering that, would you still run 75x4? I'll figure out either way saturday...i cant do shit till then, when I actually am not working and its sunny.
12/15/2005 8:55:56 PM
well, you'd have to consider what frequency you'll be cutting your sub off at. i usually cut mine off around 100 hz. i would still run the amp to all speakers so the 6x9s will provide decent midbass. you can always fade more to the front so you'll hear the rears less to give more of a false soundstage but you'll still get the midbass required so you won't have any holes in your frequency range.
12/16/2005 8:37:52 AM
12/16/2005 2:29:45 PM
Awesome replies, thanks a bunch to all of you.
12/16/2005 3:12:11 PM
^^as big as you are into clean, crisp sound, soundstaging and imaging, and thd, i'm surprised you suggested to run speakers off the h/u's internal amp and use the pre-outs. you should know that is a no-no when it comes to keeping thd levels low.
12/16/2005 7:15:21 PM
huh?I tell you what, you set up that strawman a little bit better and I might be inclined to telling you that you don't know what you are talking about.
12/16/2005 10:12:52 PM
this thread is getting annoying[Edited on December 16, 2005 at 10:21 PM. Reason : mainly just 1CYPHER]
12/16/2005 10:21:40 PM
^^so are you saying using the head unit's internal amp to power speakers and power a set of pre-outs will not increase THD?
12/16/2005 11:14:41 PM
This is long as shit, and technical as hell... I'm crazy bored and can't sleep I've got to admit that I was annoyed with 1CYPHER when I first started reading this thread... but then he laid down very correctly how you can damage a speaker by overpowering it.I say be nice to him he appologized for being a dick in the first few posts... I'm going to re-itterate and then bring in some technical numbers and how you can damage a speaker... first how does a speaker move: (joe#### correct me if I'm off on anything)Amplifier puts out power. power = Voltage*current. A speaker is an electromechanical device that moves by the current through the voice coil inside a magnetic field. A Voice coil is made out of magnetic wire (its what its called its not actually magnetic) that has a very fine coating so the coils create an addidative force (turns) the gauge of this wire determins how much current the speaker can handle, and its resistance is directly related to its length which is directly related to the number of turns and diameter which is directly related to the force it can exert on the total moving mass INCLUDING itself. because of this you can have a poor performing speaker with a extroadinarily high powerhandling (big wire lots of added weight from the wire itself).The insulation coating is very thin. As the voice coil heats up the coating becomes more suceptible to melting away, which will bridge the pieces of the coil together, Power dissapated in the voice coil comes directly from the DC component (=bad) if the coil gets hot enough its possible for the entire thing to fuse together and become a direct short circuit. interesting enough the motion of the speaker actual provides cooling for the coil at lower frequencies this cooling function doesn't happen AND the speaker is more suceptible to spikes which can overdrive it harmfully out of range (overthrow or bottom out or both).http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm voice coils range from 32 gauge which handle half an amp (p= IV so .5*70 = 35w) on tweeters to 16gauge for subs. (70*22 = 1540w) (70v is a typical voltage rail for a higher power amp... its somewhat of an arbitrary number) point being you can run too much power to a speaker, the numbers given aren't precise but are for example. The ammount of power a speaker can handle is determined by the gauge that the voice coil is created with. "clean power" means that there aren't spikes in the signal sent to the speaker that originate from the amp and not the signal. These spikes are very bad b/c they are nonlinear in relation to the music and detract from the sinusoidal nature of the signal and can send the speaker to one side or another where the voice coil can bottom out or the cone can pull too far. Under powering a speaker hurts a speaker because the amplifier is not capable of sustaining the current needed to drive the speaker each way. Speakers DO NOT HAVE FEEDBACK they are somewhat like a stepper motor, and work under the assumption that they have done what you have told them to do. So if you underpower a speaker the speaker does not have the current to drive to the correct position, it will be out of position when its told to go further the other way. The mechanical suspension on a speaker can contribute to this because it wants to center the speaker. if the speaker isn't under control once again eventually it will track to one side if the signal is not sinusoidal or if there is not enough current (translates to power) to drive the speaker correctly and bottom out the speaker or overthrow which can create a nonlinear instance for the voice coil to come in contact with the side of the magnetic gap and warp. a warped voice coil is what you hear when you press on a speaker and it scratches.pushing more power to speakers is a good thing because it provides a wider range that the speaker will function under it makes sure that the speaker will always have the proper current to move where its suppose to. TOO much power and you will burn the voice coils, however with properly set gains and if you don't listen to your music cranked full blast all the time you won't run into this problem. I ran 350wRMS (xtr1400 ) to 2 cerwin vega 6.5's for a week with the crossover turned on at 80Hz... they sang like birds... the moment I turned the crossovers off at high volume they fried almost as fast as when I hooked a different pair to a wallsocket(3600wRMS @60Hz until the 15A breaker flips) 75Wrms is a lot of power for any door speaker 200wRMS is excessive. A Lot of power for door speakers is 100w but I too favor a solid front stage so go ahead and feed them 200w
12/17/2005 12:22:54 AM