99mitseclipse
10+ year member
say what?
- Thread Starter
- #46
Yeah I have a friend with these. Would want something with a bit more power handling but I'm not sure of much more out there.
I don't really agree with this statment, at least if we are looking at an amp working near it's nominal rated load... The power supply in a typical amp has the current capacity to give on the order of 30% more power then it's rated for.. at this point you run into a clipping mode where no additional power can be made by driving the amp harder, and THD skyrockets...Do you realize that a heavily clipped amplifier can output twice its rated power, or more?
I thought that when playing tuned frequency, the load is actually a lot higher than normal thus essentially sending less power to the subwoofer.There are a couple possibilities:
-Your gains werent set correctly and therefore clipped the signal and fried the sub.
-If your gains WERE set correctly, and you were beating on it for a while and your voltage started dropping very low, that will cause your amp to clip.
-The 3,xxxrms was just too much for the sub to handle for this amount of time, blowing the sub.
-The song you were playing had a note that was right at your box tuning. At your box tuning, the port becomes most efficient and the cone excursion drops severly. Because of this lack of excursion, the coil cannot disappate heat, and overheats, blowing the sub.
Im guessing it was little of EACH of the first 3. I would make sure your gains are set properly, make your your electrical system is on par, and then just go easy on the sub. 3,000+ true watts is a LOT for any speaker to take for more than a minute or so on any bass heavy music. A coil is a coil, and can only disappate so much heat before it fails.
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In your first paragraph you disagree with my statement, and in the second one you reiterate what I said, that you were disagreeing with. Just looking at amplifier output in sinewave form, as the signal clips and the waveform flattens, you can easily accumulate double the area under the wave (2x the power) while not increasing amplitude, thus a flat or squared wave, with double the power delivered to the speaker. This is a well documented phenomenon.I don't really agree with this statment, at least if we are looking at an amp working near it's nominal rated load... The power supply in a typical amp has the current capacity to give on the order of 30% more power then it's rated for.. at this point you run into a clipping mode where no additional power can be made by driving the amp harder, and THD skyrockets...
With music you can continue to compress the signal and you may be able to reach a point where you are getting 2x the average power then the amp was delivering clean... but I think we can all argree that it would sound pretty bad...
Most people listen to music, and I guess you might double average output with clipping and compression... this is what I suppose I might agree with, although I think most people would be hard pressed to achieve this level of distortion...Just looking at amplifier output in sinewave form, as the signal clips and the waveform flattens, you can easily accumulate double the area under the wave (2x the power) while not increasing amplitude, thus a flat or squared wave, with double the power delivered to the speaker.