wow. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/eek.gif.771b7a90cf45cabdc554ff1121c21c4a.gifNo That Makes No Sense.
How does the DMM tell you if the signal is clipped or not?wow. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/eek.gif.771b7a90cf45cabdc554ff1121c21c4a.gif
because if you follow that formula i wrote on the other page, anything above 20 volts on your output is clipping. Have you read anything ive been writing?
This is only with that example, its going to change with different equipment obviously.
Yes, of course. Only way to really "see" it is with an oscilliscope, and even then you are just seeing lines on a screen.you cant "see a clip" with a dmm, you just tune it to a safe frequency
You just answered your own question dude. Thats your MAX output before you start clipping. Think about it...Umm, no. How is anything above 20v clipping?
That formula tell you that if you want 100w;s output than your output voltage should be 20v
Heres whats going through my mind right now.You just answered your own question dude. Thats your MAX output before you start clipping. Think about it...
So your going to try and push 150 watts out of a amp that only has 100 watts to give?Heres whats going through my mind right now.
Why couldn't you just change that equation to 150w?? 24.5v... Thats more than 20v.. So then you would say anything above 24.5 is clipping???