explain efficiency of amp please

Efficiency is a pretty simple concept...simply a percentage of how much power the amp makes relative to how much power goes into it //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif

THD+N has nothing to do with it.

 
what about A amp that is 105db efficient
If you are talking about SNR, then that has nothing to do with the electrical efficiency of an amplifier.

SNR

Signal To Noise Ratio. Measure of signal strength relative to background noise. For a single signal, it's simply the ratio of usable info to the amount of unusable info (undesired Noise).

Can be refered to as how "clean" an amp is/can be.

Efficiency

The result of Useful Power Output / Total Power Input.

Example: an amp has a max current draw of 80A at 12.5V with a 2 Ohm load. If 100% efficiency was obtained, this amplifier would put out 1000W. But since it puts out 650W, then we can calculate like so:

650 / 1000 = 0.65 (or 65% efficiency...very common for a Class D amp).

[EDIT] Jmac beat me to it! //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif

 
Highest efficency (on paper) is currently held the class X amplifiers of MA Audio with a claim of 97%. I'd like to see what makes them tick. I'm betting it's almost identical to an A/B with a microprocessor assisting the power supply.

 
Highest efficency (on paper) is currently held the class X amplifiers of MA Audio with a claim of 97%. I'd like to see what makes them tick. I'm betting it's almost identical to an A/B with a microprocessor assisting the power supply.
BS flag on that one.

MAYBE on a test bench, at the ideal resistance, with the ideal power supply, at the ideal power output and the ideal frequency. Even then I seriously doubt it.

But in a car, playing music...not a chance.

Unless, of course, MA and all their chrome has just surpassed all the real companies that actually spend some money on R & D.

 
Pretty simple concept as well ... The ratio of the loudness of the signal relative to the loudness of the noise ...
For example, if the system is playing @ 130 dB with an amplifier with a 90 dB SNR, the noise floor would be 40 dB ...
is it the same thing as the db sensitivity

if so is the higher the batter?

 
is it the same thing as the db sensitivity
Got a link to a specific example ?

Some companies label things different.

if so is the higher the batter?
For Signal to Noise Ratio.....not really.

Technically, from a pure measurement standpoint, higher is better.

But what's measureable isn't always audible. Really, most any even decent quality amplifier should have an adequate enough SNR to make it of little consequence.

 
Highest efficency (on paper) is currently held the class X amplifiers of MA Audio with a claim of 97%. I'd like to see what makes them tick. I'm betting it's almost identical to an A/B with a microprocessor assisting the power supply.
Thats excactlywhat it is! shhhhhh! dont tell no one else!
 
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