Hey Medic Thanks for ur define information i am very much thankful for the knowledge u share im a dj and i have never known this before,never too big to learn
I really liked this approach to instructing, but feel the RMS description was unnecessarily misleading (I'm sure Gary is aware of the more accurate explanation). I am not a speaker expert but an engineer with some acoustics studies, and RMS is a term used to quantify sinusoidal/AC oscillations, in that sense it does not mean an average of various sounds played (as described here) but a way of indicating the average intensity of the AC/sinusoidal wave (i.e not the trough or the peak). It may well be that manufacturers then use 24 hrs of various music to determine it, but the reason it sits down around 2/3 of peak is pure and simply because it's averaging a sine wave.
yes I am looking at a sound pro Bluetooth speaker nds-1232 it says that it has 3000 watts and that is all nothing about rms, ohms, program, that is all as far as numbers with a 12" woofer and1.5" tweeter is there any way to find more information that can help me out thanks in advance
If I have 2 speakers and each are DUAL 4 ohm voice coil speakers rated at 1000 watts for each speaker for a total of 2000 watt capability and I wire them together in series to make them 8 ohms, does the wattage rating now change along with the ohms changing?
1" voice coil ~ 100W continuous. Learn new thing today although I already knew V (continuous,) V (rms), V (peak). It is not feasible to bench test an existing speaker to test their max, as that will blown the driver. Using the voice coil sounds like a good estimate
Pretty much any speaker you can think of has a wattage rating. As long as you have the actual part number of the woofer, you should be able to find some kind of information on Google. But you can gauge an approximate by rule of thumb on the diameter of the voice coil figuring 100 watts per inch.
Thank you very much Sir for this clear explanation. The world needs more people like you. Cheers!
Wow!!!!!! Some one who actually answered my question regarding speaker wattage. Thank you sir.
Best of the best for me to understand the differences. Great Explanation.
This guy is a legend.
Hey Medic Thanks for ur define information i am very much thankful for the knowledge u share im a dj and i have never known this before,never too big to learn
Thanks for this Gary. Some solid insight here.
Damnit I could hang with you all day. I have 4 pa amps and 15 speakers in my living room and I'm sure I have I hooked up wrong
Been there, Done that
Lol bro i think so too 😂😂
I really liked this approach to instructing, but feel the RMS description was unnecessarily misleading (I'm sure Gary is aware of the more accurate explanation). I am not a speaker expert but an engineer with some acoustics studies, and RMS is a term used to quantify sinusoidal/AC oscillations, in that sense it does not mean an average of various sounds played (as described here) but a way of indicating the average intensity of the AC/sinusoidal wave (i.e not the trough or the peak). It may well be that manufacturers then use 24 hrs of various music to determine it, but the reason it sits down around 2/3 of peak is pure and simply because it's averaging a sine wave.
Very straight forward explanation
So informative ❤❤
I have 2 x JAMO 265 speakers 150 watt speakers can you advise me on the best amp to power them they are 3 way speakers 12 inch bass cones
Thank you simple and easy explaination
So informative, sir. Thanks!
This is very informative. Thank you
yes I am looking at a sound pro Bluetooth speaker nds-1232 it says that it has 3000 watts and that is all nothing about rms, ohms, program, that is all as far as numbers with a 12" woofer and1.5" tweeter is there any way to find more information that can help me out thanks in advance
If I have 2 speakers and each are DUAL 4 ohm voice coil speakers rated at 1000 watts for each speaker for a total of 2000 watt capability and I wire them together in series to make them 8 ohms, does the wattage rating now change along with the ohms changing?
Much appreciated for that information
Three different stages of power explain at its best.
wow! the best tips ever! thanks sir...
1" voice coil ~ 100W continuous. Learn new thing today although I already knew V (continuous,) V (rms), V (peak). It is not feasible to bench test an existing speaker to test their max, as that will blown the driver. Using the voice coil sounds like a good estimate
Wwow that was cool👍thxsomuch.
great sir
If you want to reveal the dumb within a person, ask them about audio or music instruments. You'll hear some amazing shit.
Do Kenwood speakers have a genuine wattage or rating?
Pretty much any speaker you can think of has a wattage rating. As long as you have the actual part number of the woofer, you should be able to find some kind of information on Google. But you can gauge an approximate by rule of thumb on the diameter of the voice coil figuring 100 watts per inch.
how do i find whatts
Great
So I guess I can throw all the blindstein crap out and go with simple, cool