Understanding amplifier wattage ratings again

Ғылым және технология

In yet another attempt at helping folks understand how and why amplifiers double their power into lower impedances, Paul helps us understand.

Пікірлер: 136

  • @paulchristman5875
    @paulchristman58754 ай бұрын

    Lightbulb gone off 30 years ago, but because of my love for all this, I never grow tired of it. Thank as always, Paul.

  • @user-pf9nk7uy3z
    @user-pf9nk7uy3z4 ай бұрын

    Thanks Paul, we appreciate your patience with us! I do enjoy your videos!

  • @janinapalmer8368

    @janinapalmer8368

    4 ай бұрын

    You can't say he doesn't try - hey !

  • @TheBinaryWolf
    @TheBinaryWolf4 ай бұрын

    Excellent explanation by a gifted teacher.

  • @laurelhardy4064
    @laurelhardy40644 ай бұрын

    So Paul, one day when you're free, could you please explain to us how amplifier wattage works?🤔

  • @InsideOfMyOwnMind

    @InsideOfMyOwnMind

    4 ай бұрын

    😎😎😎😎

  • @AchselFord

    @AchselFord

    4 ай бұрын

    It don't seem to be too much inner resistance in Paul when it comes to explaining this multiple times. Not currently at least.🔋

  • @brianmosher4053

    @brianmosher4053

    4 ай бұрын

    Watch barevids.

  • @johnmoser1162

    @johnmoser1162

    4 ай бұрын

    Watts = Ampere * Volt

  • @TheMMadmaXX

    @TheMMadmaXX

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AchselFordCURRENTly 😂

  • @williamcolon3647
    @williamcolon36474 ай бұрын

    I absolutely don’t get tired of this vídeos Paul . I feel honored and grateful that you take your precious time to teach us. Thank you 🙏.

  • @tomw7043
    @tomw70434 ай бұрын

    Thanks, Paul. This is the best crystal-clear explanation I've heard so far!

  • @RuiChambel
    @RuiChambel4 ай бұрын

    The tube with a narrow end is the perfect example! Let's say you have a pump putting out X pressure of water on the wide side and the water at the narrow end, reaches 1 m distance. If the narrow end increases its diameter, the water will now reach a shorter distance. So, in order to reach the same 1 m, you need a pump with more pressure, hence you need more power to achieve the same result.

  • @ericlburch
    @ericlburch4 ай бұрын

    To quote Beetlejuice: "I've seen the EXORCIST ABOUT A HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SEVEN TIMES, AND IT KEEPS GETTING FUNNIER EVERY SINGLE TIME I SEE IT."

  • @omnirath
    @omnirath4 ай бұрын

    Hi Paul, please don’t ever stop making videos on those topics and how all that plays a part on how amplifiers works, making amplifiers I realize nearly everyday that even if you already have a great sounding installation or know how they function you always end up learning new things and information that in the end play a lot in any setup ! You’re a mine of information thanks :)

  • @photosforfun1039
    @photosforfun10393 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Electrical engineer here and I loved your explanation.

  • @Mebtaku
    @Mebtaku4 ай бұрын

    Paul, I’m watching your videos for … I don’t know exactly, a year? Two? I can’t tell 😄 and im not completely green and yet I find your videos absolutely bonkers. I wish you many years of educating dudes of how their blocks work 👍

  • @L.Scott_Music
    @L.Scott_Music4 ай бұрын

    It's worth watching again because we have to explain it to others as well. So, some will learn and some may learn to teach.

  • @freekwo7772
    @freekwo77724 ай бұрын

    Wow, even better than the last time. I will compose a question about the gain to completly understand what is happening between speakers and amp.

  • @andreas7278
    @andreas72784 ай бұрын

    The explanation that we are comparing the two potentials of the amp with the speaker in between instead of between the amp and the speaker just turned a huge light on. Thanks Paul!

  • @dharshannanayakkara1956
    @dharshannanayakkara19564 ай бұрын

    Hi Paul, I have listened to about 5 of the 50 videos on this topic. I ha e to say that the light bulb 💡 really went off this time. Thank you

  • @tomday7309
    @tomday73094 ай бұрын

    This just appeared on my youtube feed and I watched it all the way through. Thanks for explaining the issue clearly. As a power tool product developer, I focused more on the mechanical and human factors aspects until I hired an electrical engineer to develop some unique speed controls. I learned a lot in a hurry about what you just said. In my job I also learned about how electricity flows out of your 120V wall outlet through a circuit and into an electric motor. In your example we're looking at a speaker instead of a motor. Your amp and speakers are doing a lot more work than you think!

  • @unity1015
    @unity10154 ай бұрын

    Wattage rating indicates "capacity". For a fixed voltage, provided the amp can source the current (maintain the voltage at the output) meaning negligible internal resistance, a 4 ohm speaker will take more current and thus dissipate more power ( w = I* v = I*I*R). Giving information about how the amp delivers power to two different impedance speakers says something about the amp's ability to handle changes in a given speaker's impedance as music plays. Some manufacturers gave average wattage and peak wattage ratings to help with this, especially if they had internal "soft clipping" like the NADs.

  • @giangvu7902
    @giangvu79024 ай бұрын

    Keep up the good work Paul. We appreciate it!

  • @billfife6569
    @billfife65694 ай бұрын

    Great job Paul. The light bulb came on in my head

  • @JDavidG.700
    @JDavidG.7004 ай бұрын

    Thanks Paul. After reading the comments here, I like your description much better. When you "get it" you "get it", maybe. I like your way of using for instances, like things getting hot & batteries blowing up. Talking about air as an insulator; I like one of my descriptions. While being trained at the Electric Company we had to gear up before getting within 14 feet 6 inches of certain equipment. If you didn't you became a circuit part. If you could possibly run 35 feet away, not 14 feet 6 inches, it might let you go. You might get a clue of the danger beforehand, like your hair standing up, but you might not. Consider that little voice your guardian angel.

  • @bikdav
    @bikdav4 ай бұрын

    Thank you Paul! This is exactly what I was taught in summer school many years ago.

  • @isaacsykes3
    @isaacsykes34 ай бұрын

    Paul, please 🙏🏿 be advised that you also get new viewers every day who've never heard this information. Keep educating.

  • @garyvass1034
    @garyvass10344 ай бұрын

    Paul! Excellent video and videos.

  • @jonpatrick66
    @jonpatrick664 ай бұрын

    Hey, I got it! I really got it! Hot dang Paul, that was a great explanation. Thanks for doing what you do. Your videos most always put a smile on my face. ;⁠)

  • @inalthmosse4729
    @inalthmosse47294 ай бұрын

    Example: In smaller ROADS the vehicles must go faster in a single direction, Large roads the vehicles can go slower but at both directions. At the end of the day the smaller road will need more EFFORT and attention to mantein and prevent accidents than the bigger road. Road = Resistance Effort = Wattages Thanks from Mozambique...

  • @bobcat6653
    @bobcat66534 ай бұрын

    I'm an Engineer, I get this, but it's fun to watch you struggle to get these points across!

  • @bobcat6653

    @bobcat6653

    4 ай бұрын

    Maybe you can explain how power amps have an internal resistance and are not 'ideal', Use a whiteboard. Professor Paul!?

  • @keeloraz9452
    @keeloraz94524 ай бұрын

    Paul please understand this, I might get tired of it if you made about this topic about 1000th time …. But even then I’ll keep watching it. Love your passion, love your experience, love your calm demeanour. Keep it coming. Love from Pakistan 🇵🇰

  • @Sgrape49jj
    @Sgrape49jj4 ай бұрын

    If you're riding a bike with gears (speaker resistance) and want to maintain 10mph (output wattage). In a small gear, you don't have to pedal as fast to maintain 10mph (amplifier doesn't have to output as much power to drive the speaker). Shift into a bigger gear, you have to pedal much faster to maintain 10mph (the amplifier has to give more power to maintain same speaker level).

  • @johndaddabbo9383
    @johndaddabbo93834 ай бұрын

    Excellent Paul, Thank you!!! 💡💡💡

  • @RudieVissenberg
    @RudieVissenberg4 ай бұрын

    Thanks Paul, I think finally my lightbulb has gone on with enough resistance so that my brain does not shortcut 👍 I think I have grasped the concept. Now I also understand why the electromagnet my brother and I built when we were young, could not be powered by my model train transformer but worked with a battery. It got very hot but fortunately never exploded.

  • @tjeerdkruidhof5808
    @tjeerdkruidhof58084 ай бұрын

    Again, thank you Paul! Makes sense now!

  • @adamjudis
    @adamjudis4 ай бұрын

    The lightbulb went off, great explanation, very helpful and thank you for sharing! Now this would lead me to the question in which I think I know the answer. If you have a lower wattage amp, you probably would want higher impedance speakers. Of course it tells you this in the manual and I get that, but if you did not know, you would probably want to start out with higher impedance speakers.. right?

  • @davidstevens7809
    @davidstevens78094 ай бұрын

    Excellent video paul. You just accidently agreed with saying.any current limited or adjusting voltage rail voltage due to imp. Is wrong modern bs.. yes your correct. Any amp that cant follow ohms law cant faithfully deliver the source correctly.. YES OHMS LAW tells the truth. Ill go further. Any amp that the voltage rails move ANY..no matter what load is compromised.. GOOD JOB.. PAUL

  • @janinapalmer8368
    @janinapalmer83684 ай бұрын

    Hahaha .... I only watched this to see how well you're doing in explaining this topic .... you did well .. in the end 😂😂... maybe take 3 ... bit later ... I don't know why so many people have such difficulty understanding this simple subject .... I truly think more people should be introduced to Ohm's Law and the basic Power formulae.... I'll give you 8/10 for this lol 😝.... keep trying ... I love your sense of humour... so irreverent too ... 😝

  • @SethMangan
    @SethMangan4 ай бұрын

    Thank you Paul

  • @djmagnitize
    @djmagnitize4 ай бұрын

    The water pressure is the voltage, the amount of water is the amperage/current. Lower resistance/larger diameter tube can "draw" a higher volume of water than a tube with a smaller diameter opening. And the wattage is the water pressure (voltage) multiplied by the water volume (amperage/current). So the combination of more water pressure and water volume of a larger diameter tube is more wattage.

  • @Rodarwah
    @Rodarwah4 ай бұрын

    i still love to hear you...

  • @davidburcham7951
    @davidburcham79514 ай бұрын

    In college I remember my professor saying "It takes voltage to push amperage through resistance" (Ohms law E over I x R) It always made sense to me as the lower the resistance, the easier for the amps to flow. That's why power doubles (in reality its less) when speakers resistance is cut in half by wiring in parallel. If wired in series then its the opposite. Be careful when wiring in parallel as home systems cannot normally handle any speaker 4 ohms or >. Unlike car amps, which was made to run much lower (I had a US amp that could run @ 1/2 ohm) and those was called cheater amps. They allowed you to cheat in SPL contest, where you were limited to a 50 watt or 100 watt amp. Bur with a cheater, you could wire those subs in parallel and get extreme power out of an amp! I had a friend that used the leads of a similar amp weld with it!! Those HCCA's back then was amazing!

  • @KurtColville

    @KurtColville

    4 ай бұрын

    I think you meant that Ohm's Law is V = I*R.

  • @Alchemetica
    @Alchemetica4 ай бұрын

    Well explained.

  • @PATRIK67KALLBACK
    @PATRIK67KALLBACK4 ай бұрын

    Keep up with the videos Paul. Even if you're an Audiophile you don't have to be an engineer and need somebody to explain.

  • @BrooklynGuy1988
    @BrooklynGuy19884 ай бұрын

    a simple way to think of it is the speaker's resistance acts as a barrier that the amp's power must pass through to reach and drive the speaker. a speaker with high resistance will pose a greater barrier thus less overall wattage makes it past to drive the speaker. conversely a low resistance speaker puts up less of a barrier to the amp's power, enabling it to deliver more watts to the speaker.

  • @JDSound180
    @JDSound1804 ай бұрын

    Amplifiers work at a maximum output voltage and the amperage changes depending on the speakers resistance. Remember these electrical math formulas. volts x amps = watts. volts ÷ ohms = amps For example an amp has amaximum voltage of 100 volts. At 1 ohm 100 amps would flow and that would give you 10,000 watts of power. At 2 ohms your power will cut in half to 50 amps or 5000 watts of power. At 4 ohms 25 amps of current or 2500 watts of power. At 8 ohms 12.5 amps of current or 1250 watts of power. And 16 ohms would further cut that in half to 6.25 amps or 625 watts. That's why when reducing the resistance the amplifier increases power. However your amplifier has a maximum amperage it can support also before it blows up or goes into clipping based on the internals and power being supplied to the amp.

  • @johnshaw359
    @johnshaw3594 ай бұрын

    Speakers have a crazy dynamic resistance curve based on frequency. Current drive under duress is what's needed, this was proved by NAD over 40 years ago.

  • @rynev3392
    @rynev33924 ай бұрын

    Good explanation….. now people just need to realize that the ohm of a speaker is just a calculated average over industry standard frequency range. Most 8ohm speakers actually dip down to 4ohms or possibly lower in frequencies 100-300hz

  • @audiodemos2579
    @audiodemos25794 ай бұрын

    Great Explanation!. I have a few questions remaining. If we have a music signal with content on all the music spectrum. What is the real impedance the amp actually "sees" from the speaker considering the speaker has an impedance and phase curve? why bass content requires more power? Is is because on lower frequency the impedance is lower too? If the impedance of some frequencies are greater (or lower) than others. Would those lower impedance frequencies sound louder and unbalance the sound? Why even if you probably don't use more than 10 watts (because he speaker sensitivity is high) at home a more powerful amplifier sounds more dynamic and engaging than a less powerful one with the same speakers? It is because the more powerful has faster slew rate?

  • @andreasmoller9798
    @andreasmoller97984 ай бұрын

    I think its important to watch what amplifier is deliver in lower impdence loads, no amp will struggle at 8 ohms, with 4 and 2 ohms loads its a different story, i run a Hegel h390 through b&w 702 s2 speakers, and it drives those speakers easily, its more than comfortable with 4 and 2 ohms loads as well

  • @donaldmacdougall1600
    @donaldmacdougall16004 ай бұрын

    Very well explained Paul. Love your show. There used to be a formula for figuring out how many watts you need from a amp for a given size room. I can’t seem to find it anywhere. It went cubic feet of a room divided by ? Equal watts you need for that room. Anybody help me with this. Thanks

  • @reestyfarts

    @reestyfarts

    4 ай бұрын

    One way is begin with a nice powerful class D amp with an affordable preamp. Whatever speakers you use will work. Just don't melt or scorch anything turning it up too high. Next acquisition finetune speaker size if feasible.

  • @ssgeek4515
    @ssgeek45153 ай бұрын

    If one person gets it out of one million then success 👍

  • @guystewart9554
    @guystewart95544 ай бұрын

    the resistance is what powers the speaker, if the current can pass through easier (lower resistance), then it takes more of it to cause the effect.

  • @notircm
    @notircm4 ай бұрын

    You jus ligheten up my "life" Paul!!!! Thank YOUR pacience explaining this again and again for we, people less experinced with the physics, especialy with the audio P.S. Question , it might be as stupid as the subject, or even worse, on the headsets its the same?

  • @andrewthompson1464
    @andrewthompson14642 ай бұрын

    Thanks 🤩

  • @tiffinytiffable
    @tiffinytiffable4 ай бұрын

    Ok, as resistance drops p/v=v/r the wattage relationship has to increase. Got it. But you said resistance is between the output and ground. Is ground considered the state of moving from a higher entropy to Negentropy? In other words back to a resting neutral state. Back to the horn analogy, the horn in its resting state would represent ground but as the air is manipulated in the horn sound/work is done but the each horn will have a different resistance or fight against the entropic state that is in direct relationship with its tubing diameter. So in essence ground is like the ultimate resistance setting the standard or coefficient for all other sudo grounds? I say sudo because at some point all potentials return to a resting orderly state then at some point back to disorder hence our existence 🙂

  • @rynovait
    @rynovait4 ай бұрын

    If a subwoofer rated 400W nominal power with DVC 4 ohms connected in series to make it 8 ohm, can I use the sub with a 200watt RMS amp?

  • @rickbarber6758
    @rickbarber67584 ай бұрын

    The way I understand it is the lower the impedance, the lower the resistance. The lower resistance lets in more power. 4 ohm load draws more power than 8 ohm load.

  • @PetraKann
    @PetraKann4 ай бұрын

    An audio amplifier is not a constant current or constant power device. The Volume control sets the voltage output. When you disconnect the 8 Ohm load for example, the output drive voltage should remain constant. Power, P = I^2R = V^2/R So if you increase the resistance, R, whilst keeping the current constant the power will increase. If you increase the resistance, R, whilst keeping the voltage constant, then the power will decrease. Keeping the volume control at the same setting will keep the voltage constant, so increasing the resistance will actually decrease the power.

  • @endrizo
    @endrizo4 ай бұрын

    well yeah but why is it different with headphones and inears?? low impedance headphones they say are easy to drive and hi impedance ones are hard to drive so you need an headphone amp. ?? anyone? thanks

  • @larrygaines7462
    @larrygaines74624 ай бұрын

    Amps of the ab type have a hi power swamping resistor for power into a 6 to 16 ohm load low impedance overheats these and failure occurs

  • @philmu1983
    @philmu19834 ай бұрын

    Hi, i understand the theory of wattage in solid state amplifier. But when the amp encounters higher impedance when it's supplying a fixed voltage, would the transistors produce higher voltage to mitigate the higher impedance it sees at the speakers at certain frequencies? Thanks

  • @wally7856

    @wally7856

    4 ай бұрын

    No, the amp puts out a fixed voltage and could care less what the impedance is as long as it doesn't overload it's current capacity.

  • @Skye_the_toller
    @Skye_the_toller4 ай бұрын

    And… why if a bridge an amplifier to use it mono, one speaker… the ohms go from 8 to 4??? More resistance if I have one speaker instead of 2 (stereo) (Parasound amplifier manual)

  • @Davidkxf
    @Davidkxf4 ай бұрын

    Why do some speaker manufacturers use 4 ohm impedance and others 8 ohm?

  • @ThinkingBetter
    @ThinkingBetter4 ай бұрын

    These videos are all awesome. Power = Voltage x Voltage / Impedance. Twice the voltage means 4 times the power. Twice the impedance means half the power.

  • @hoobsgroove

    @hoobsgroove

    4 ай бұрын

    no twice the voltage doesn't mean necessarily four times the power it's not voltage that determines it it's amps, depends on the amps, if your power supply is not capable or the amplifier is not capable producing the amps you won't get anywhere near four times or even twice as powerful

  • @PetraKann

    @PetraKann

    4 ай бұрын

    An audio amplifier is not a constant current or constant power device. The Volume control sets the voltage output. When you disconnect the 8 Ohm load for example, the output drive voltage should remain constant. Power, P = I^2R = V^2/R So if you increase the resistance, R, whilst keeping the current constant the power will increase. If you increase the resistance, R, whilst keeping the voltage constant, then the power will decrease. Keeping the volume control at the same setting will keep the voltage constant, so increasing the resistance will actually decrease the power.

  • @ThinkingBetter

    @ThinkingBetter

    4 ай бұрын

    @@hoobsgroove Well, generally it works like that and a power amplifier is mostly a voltage amplifier. The internal power rails of the amp defines the clipping level and the max RMS sine wave power level where the peaks of the sine waves start hitting max voltage. Of course at any given time, actual power is lower than peak power due to volume setting and music content. Actual peak RMS power is close to the calculated power from peak RMS voltage that is derived from the power rail voltage divided by square root of 2. Any decent amplifier can maintain the power rail voltage near constant at peak power. Resistance is not the right term here as we are dealing with AC signals.

  • @ThinkingBetter

    @ThinkingBetter

    4 ай бұрын

    @@PetraKann Since an audio signal is AC, the correct measure is impedance rather than resistance. A power amplifier is actually a voltage amplifier but with adequate max current capability to drive speaker loads. Of course any amplifier will have a limit of power that might be due to the transformer not able to output adequate current. To save money, many amps can deliver peak power by using capacitors to maintain constant power rail voltage during the peaks only.

  • @amfreq

    @amfreq

    4 ай бұрын

    I finally have an understanding of this impedance thing. Thanks, Paul! 🎉

  • @leaveempty5320
    @leaveempty53204 ай бұрын

    Most people don't realise the watts are a consequence of load. They often think the watts are always there or increase with volume even in open circuit.

  • @Roosville1
    @Roosville14 ай бұрын

    I’ll make this simple. Your power amplifier is a VOLTAGE amplifier. Example. A monoblock power amp has a fixed gain. For a gain of X100 then 100mV in becomes 10V out. Power is the voltage (here = 10V) squared divided by the speaker resistance. 10V output squared is always 100 for both. We then divide by the resistance for watts. 8 ohms will divide 10V by 8, 4 ohms divides 10V by only 4, So 4 ohms is double the watts. So then, what changed? The current did, 10V in 8 ohm is 1.25A, 10V in 4 ohm is 2.5A. The amplifier is required to have a power supply that can provide double the current in order for the power reach the 10V required into the 4 ohm load. Weak PSU = no doubling of power.

  • @mitchtaylor6512

    @mitchtaylor6512

    4 ай бұрын

    You have it mostly correct, but no amp can really double down when it's already at max power into 8ohms

  • @polokomogatusi3787
    @polokomogatusi37874 ай бұрын

    We’ll explained - wattage buildup vs lower resistance

  • @EyesOfByes
    @EyesOfByes4 ай бұрын

    Make as many "wattage" videos as you want. Why? You flood the algorithm with factual good videos :)

  • @DethFromAbove1985
    @DethFromAbove19854 ай бұрын

    (Stupid question alert!) So we tend to think of watts like horsepower. Is there more to it than that?

  • @SantanKGhey1234
    @SantanKGhey12344 ай бұрын

    I watched Pauls video on wattage once and I got it many years ago… what's wrong with people?

  • @ptg01
    @ptg014 ай бұрын

    Tired of you ? NEVER !!! :D

  • @rolandtiiroja
    @rolandtiiroja4 ай бұрын

    I didn't really need it, but I got it. Lmao

  • @kd1010163
    @kd10101634 ай бұрын

    Take his example. You need more water (watts) with an open mouth (low resistance) to get the same force (volume).

  • @andrewgillis5997
    @andrewgillis59974 ай бұрын

    As an engineering idiot and sticking with the tube analogy it seems that if blowing into the tube is the amplifier, then it would take more power to get the same water pressure from the larger (lower impedance) tube. Is that what he said? (Either he)

  • @drummerdoingstuff5020
    @drummerdoingstuff50204 ай бұрын

    You do you, we play dumb and enjoy..

  • @CGR2044
    @CGR20444 ай бұрын

    Okay. But with high impedance headphones the opposite usually happens. High impedance headphones usually need amplifiers with many watts of output to drive them well. Why does this happen with headphones and not with speakers? I have some Sennheisers with 300 ohm impedance and without a powerful amplifier, it is very difficult to get the best out of them.

  • @Paulmcgowanpsaudio

    @Paulmcgowanpsaudio

    4 ай бұрын

    That's sort of true but not the way you think. Higher impedance headphones need more voltage, not current. Most headphone amps have limited voltage because of their lower overall wattage ratings. So getting a headphone amplifier with more wattage means it can provide more voltage (and current) when needed for higher impedance headphones. In actual use, the higher voltage into higher impedance does not use more wattage. Good to remember that watts is amps times volts. If you have high voltage but low amps you still have low wattage.

  • @CGR2044

    @CGR2044

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the explanation. Greetings from Spain.

  • @wally7856

    @wally7856

    4 ай бұрын

    You don't need many watts to drive those 300 ohm headphones, you need many volts to push some current through that high impedance load. A high wattage rated amplifier also happens to supply the high voltage you need so that's what you buy. If you hook up that high wattage amplifier to your headphones and actually measured the current flowing to the headphone you would find it to be very low (0.08 amps) at around 25 volts giving you 2 watts to your headphones. That same 25 volts into an 8ohm speaker would give you (3.1 amps) and that equated to ~ 80 watts of power going to the speaker. You don't need the high wattage capacity of the amplifier but you do need the high voltage that a high wattage amplifier can provide.

  • @maxpower78-15
    @maxpower78-154 ай бұрын

    Hahahaha. Love it

  • @Roof_Pizza
    @Roof_Pizza4 ай бұрын

    If an amp 'doubles' then the marketing dept has had its fingers in the equation. Nothing wrong with accurate specs like 100 and 165 but the marketing dept will claim 80 and 160. A recent amp I saw ($7000 USD) was 150/300 but the reviewer came up with 190/320.

  • @Benutzer101
    @Benutzer1014 ай бұрын

    Ohm's Law!

  • @georgeheatherley7408
    @georgeheatherley74084 ай бұрын

    Great thanks 😂😂

  • @endrizo
    @endrizo4 ай бұрын

    ps audio is so advanced they are already in april.

  • @carterwilliamhumphrey3373
    @carterwilliamhumphrey33734 ай бұрын

    It's in the words themselves: "Resistance", "Impedance". How about "Opposition"? Opposition to electron flow (current). The higher the impedance, the more opposition to current.

  • @Hondaguru1122
    @Hondaguru112227 күн бұрын

    Here we go again…and again..and again..

  • @elementkx
    @elementkx4 ай бұрын

    😔 I'm still confused😅

  • @user-kg2ns8pr2q
    @user-kg2ns8pr2q4 ай бұрын

    0:15

  • @onnonugteren2935
    @onnonugteren29354 ай бұрын

    Yes but where it gets difficult and needs an explanation why a given speaker has 8 or 4 Ohm. How is it build and why is it exactly 8 or 4 Ohm? Why not 6,435 Ohm?? or any Ohm you design your speaker? does it have to do about building your woofer into certain materials or amount of materials depending how loud you would like to have it? This is where probably people never get to understand this over and over again. Your answers are always the same: to short in this case. Why not try to explane how speakers are build making them 4 or 8 Ohm. Like to hear this from you. 🙂 Friendly greetings from the Netherlands, Onno Nugteren Utrecht.

  • @kodtech
    @kodtech4 ай бұрын

    Why don't you explain the physics: Power (Watts)=Volts x Amperes (P=U*I), but U=Z*I where Z is impedace not resistance! Explain the difference! ☺

  • @johnmoser1162
    @johnmoser11624 ай бұрын

    Another nasty question ... 🙂 ... lets say I have a 100W amplifier. What results in better quality - to drive a 8 or 4 or 2 ohm speaker ?

  • @paulb4661

    @paulb4661

    4 ай бұрын

    the higher the load impedance the better- lower distortion, better output/load impedance ratio, lower operating temperature.

  • @johnmoser1162

    @johnmoser1162

    4 ай бұрын

    @@paulb4661 Pls ... we need proof. (higher impedance = higher voltage = higher gain = higher distortion ...)

  • @paulb4661

    @paulb4661

    4 ай бұрын

    @@johnmoser1162 Firstly, amplifiers are supposed to maintain constant voltage, regardless of load, so your 100W amp, should double the power output for every halving of impedance. Secondly, actual measurements show relation between distortion and load. Thirdly, mathematics. Another point worth mentioning, is th3 discrepancy between nominal impedance and that "seen" by the output stage, when dealing with an actual speaker system. Stereophile's EPDR represents this well.

  • @johnmoser1162

    @johnmoser1162

    4 ай бұрын

    @@paulb4661 All I can say is - I am using now my FRFR 4x12 guitar cab as a subwoofer and I have to admit - Class D amps rock !!!

  • @paulb4661

    @paulb4661

    4 ай бұрын

    @@johnmoser1162 Indeed, human hearing is so poor at resolving low frequency range, that you can pretty much drive it with a spade. Distortion figures of between 2 and 20% are tolerated by listeners and achieved in practice by majority of commercial speakers.

  • @tristanjones7735
    @tristanjones77354 ай бұрын

    It's worth pointing out that power DOES NOT double with impedance is halved. Power is halved when impedance doubles. If you make an amplifier that has 100 watts of power at 8 ohms, that means you only need an amp that can deliver 28 ish volts and about 3.6 amps. If you plugged in a 4 ohm load to this amp, we do not get 200 watts out. We actually do indeed get 50 watts out before you overdrive the amp. In order to get 200 watts out, you need to supply double the current. Well guess what? If you were to double the current, you no longer have a 100 watts 8 ohm amp, you have made a 200 watt 4 ohm amp. And if you double the current again, you have made a 400 watt 2 ohm amp. You don't plug in a 4 ohm load into a 100 watt 8 ohm amp and magically double your power and I think this is where people get confused. I think 99% of the confusion would go away if we changed our language to say that we started with a 200 watt 4 ohm amp and the power is halved every time impedance is doubled.

  • @markovlasic1978
    @markovlasic19784 ай бұрын

    2 ohms hifi speakers can run easy with 5 watts, 15 watts,100 watts and so on. all you need is good power supply.

  • @Roof_Pizza

    @Roof_Pizza

    4 ай бұрын

    My 2-ohm speaker power recommendation is 150-600 watts. I feed them ~250, and I'm sure they coast along well under that. Amp manufacturer claims -100/150/250. I've never seen a testbench of this model but their other models all beat specs.

  • @andreasmoller9798

    @andreasmoller9798

    4 ай бұрын

    You should at least have 80 watts per channel, make sure the amp has good power figures down to 4 and 2 ohms

  • @markovlasic1978

    @markovlasic1978

    4 ай бұрын

    @@andreasmoller9798 nads can easily go down to 2 ohms , damping factor 100 , 30 watts at 8 ohms, 70+ WaTTs at 2 ohms, without heating and distortion

  • @andreasmoller9798

    @andreasmoller9798

    4 ай бұрын

    @@markovlasic1978i had nad went with hegel they have even more control and power,

  • @user-od9iz9cv1w
    @user-od9iz9cv1w4 ай бұрын

    Or you could show the formula.

  • @garyharper2943
    @garyharper29434 ай бұрын

    I put my speakers in the bathtub and they didn’t seem any more powerful.

  • @razisn
    @razisn4 ай бұрын

    The sorry state of elementary physics and mathematica teaching in western secondary education becomes very clear when most people do not know or are not able to use the simplest of simple formulas which is Ohm's law.

  • @robinr5787

    @robinr5787

    4 ай бұрын

    This is not about knowing formulas, but about understanding how it works in our daily use of our equipment. Just punching numbers in a formula don't explain anything, although they could be correct.

  • @razisn

    @razisn

    4 ай бұрын

    @@robinr5787 The ability to mentally extrapolate from a formula to 'understanding' is a basic skill you obviously lack.. You need to be explained something in inaccurate words while all is told in the equation. Enjoy your amp meal.. I recommend some chilly sauce on the side to spice it up.

  • @robinr5787

    @robinr5787

    4 ай бұрын

    @@razisn I don't think you understand, as long as educators think like that they keep failing to educate. Formulas are not real, just numbers. You can't eat them, can't hear them, can't feel them. They can be usefull of course. I'm just greatfull people like Paul also exist to teach based on real life. End of discussion for me, have a nice day and enjoy the music.

  • @razisn

    @razisn

    4 ай бұрын

    @@robinr5787 lol ok. All science is based on equations, equations are one of the pillars of our civilisation btw, but never mind.. Enjoy your amp meal, I recommend a dash of chilli sauce on the side to spice it up.

  • @liegelord135

    @liegelord135

    4 ай бұрын

    Say you believe you’re smarter than everyone else without actually saying it 😂😂😂

  • @tattednyctrkman8119
    @tattednyctrkman81194 ай бұрын

    Hey Paul. Can u please explain this to me like I’m a 2 yr old 😂

  • @philiptong4978

    @philiptong4978

    4 ай бұрын

    imagine grabbing that toy left on a table finally one day when blocking parents are not around lower resistance, more power

  • @carlubambi5541
    @carlubambi55414 ай бұрын

    DC -Power = I xV .Then there comes ac .now that's another demon on its own .True power and apparent power and capacitance and inductance and resistance and frequency .AC theory is now burning my brain cells

  • @stuartwinter2758
    @stuartwinter27584 ай бұрын

    Bose been doing this for years. Yet to hear a bose system that dosen't sound tinny. High end my arse.

  • @davidt8438
    @davidt84384 ай бұрын

    Paul, lately ( as of last year) you seem to be really bothered and preoccupied with bad comments by people when they either don’t agree with you or they say it in a way that doesn’t rub you the right way. I’ve watched dozens and dozens of these videos you put out and I always go to the comment section afterwards and what I’ve seen is maybe 1 out of 30 or 40 comments is what you would call nasty. That’s a pretty good batting average where I come from. I just don’t see all of these “nasty” comments you are complaining about. Overwhelming the comments have been positive and pleasant both towards you as well as what you are telling people. I just don’t see why you are so bothered by such a small fraction of people who disagree. Maybe you need a vacation.

  • @andrew1977au
    @andrew1977au4 ай бұрын

    Spot on Paul, a good explanation 👍

  • @RickMahoney2013
    @RickMahoney20134 ай бұрын

    ???????????

  • @NoEgg4u
    @NoEgg4u4 ай бұрын

    @1:28 -- Relevant dialog begins.

  • @ianbigsand7
    @ianbigsand74 ай бұрын

    I feel pain when you try to explain this. How about using the age old water analogy raising a water tank as an analogue for voltage? No need to talk about complex loads before the basics are understood.

  • @stimpy1226
    @stimpy12264 ай бұрын

    Instead of saying “more energy” into the amplifier why not say more current. If things are done properly you won’t have a “short circuit” from a battery or an amplifier You’re getting away from a simple engineering class where the explanation would take about five minutes on the blackboard so everyone can understand. You’re making things complicated. Some of the few reasons why you would want to have a short circuit is when you discharge a capacitor or turn on a light switch. That’s only two examples. If you show it out of speaker then you destroy it more than likely.

  • @martinvickers2348
    @martinvickers23484 ай бұрын

    Paul, your oratory skill are exceptional. I don't think I've heard a professional speaker (and I've heard many), be it university lecturer, announcer, actor, news reader, et al, talk with such engaging clarity rendering difficult topics/concepts accessible for us non-experts. No ums or ahs or slips, no hypes, no agenda, no inconsequential tangents. You address each subject directly, stick with it until the end where you still have my undivided attention! If you ever come to London, please let me know as I'd love to invite you to give a talk at one of UCL's Chemical and Physical Society evenings, here in down town Bloomsbury. Martin

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