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View Full Version : Dumb Q: What voltage to speakers ?



Peter Galbavy
24-02-2010, 17:07
I cannot find a definitive answer but there must be some standard else amps and speakers from different manufacturers would never work.

What is the voltage range that power amps drive speakers with ?

I know that the sensitivity is quoted for a specic voltage/distance/dBs etc. but in real life how high do these things go ? And is RMS a valid way of expressing the voltage ?

Just curious... thanks.

Dave Cawley
24-02-2010, 17:25
4 to nearly 100 volts RMS; for 2watts to a 1K watt. Or more in peak to peak. Not really sure what the real question is though?

Dave

Peter Galbavy
24-02-2010, 23:10
Curiosity really.

technobear
26-02-2010, 16:53
Voltage = Square Root (Power x Impedance)

So for 100 Watts into an 8 ohm speaker

Voltage = Square Root (100 x 8)

= Square Root (800)

= ~28.3 Volts

Peter Galbavy
26-02-2010, 18:22
Aha, of course!

Primalsea
26-02-2010, 20:35
28.3 volts is the RMS (Root Mean Square) to work out what the amps powersupply is you times 28.3 by 1.414 which equals 40V. This means that the amps powersupply has a -40V and a +40V voltage rail.

Therefore peak output is 40V and peak to peak voltage is 80V.

RMS is useful because it is the average voltage the speakers will effectively see.

MartinT
02-03-2010, 11:42
Because the driver transistors cannot swing power rail to power rail, you would need more like +/- 45V DC rails to swing +/- 40V and achieve 100W RMS output.

Dave Cawley
02-03-2010, 12:12
Because the driver transistors cannot swing power rail to power rail, you would need more like +/- 45V DC rails to swing +/- 40V and achieve 100W RMS output.

Too true!

Dave