ice00
10+ year member
BooM...BooM
how do u tell if ur alternator will work with ur system?...how do u determine if ur alternator will need to be replaced...??
Wow - I don't know where you learned that at - but at best it's nothing more than a bad joke.here's a cheap easy way to estimate your systems requirements. First - add all the fuse ratings of all your amplifiers. Then divide the total RMS watts by Total Peak watts and multiply this figure times your total fuse rating. This is the approximate current draw for your sound system.
Originally posted by Richard Clark:[QB] guys the math is really very siimple------4000 watts is 4000 watts and watts is always volts x amps-----so in a 12 volt system it would be 333 amps and at 15 volts it would be 266 amps--------now if we have to pass that wattage through a lossy system (like an amplifier) we have to account for efficiency losses and add a percentage----ie if the efficiency is 50% we have to double our starting amperage since the voltage is still the same------so a 50% lossy device outputing 4000 watts would draw 8000 watts-------at 13 volts this would be about 615 amps--------class AB amps range about 50-60% at full output and class D amps range about 60-80% at full output------NOW for the biggest factor-------if we are playing music we can automatically divide these numbers by 1/3 or more for short term values due to the crest factor of music and for long term values we can divide by even more-----there are pauses between songs and at the end of the disc where the current demands are VERY low and these affect the long term average quite a bit-----and---sooner or later you are bound to ride by a cop and might have to turn it down a bit-----its not likely that a long term value of more than 10% can be needed for actual power requirements in a real system-------so for that 4000 watt system most any stock alternator will do just fine since it is a rare system that requires more than 50 CONTINUOUS LONG TERM AMPS.............RC [/QB]