DBfan187
5,000+ posts
Supa's mom was here!
http://www.audiogroupforum.com/csforum/showthread.php?t=8910&highlight=overlapThe only thing that I kind of understood is that music only has transients approaching -6db to 0db? It seems like everyone understood the whole situation much better when going to this link that you posted: http://www.carsound.com/UBB/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=021713#000000 but that link no longer works. If you would care to shed more light on this I would really appreciate it. Assuming this is true, I can play even my rap music much louder than what I play it at now(which is the volume I set my gains at 0db reference?)
Please explain! I'm now very interested and it seems I won't truly get the gist of it without the knowledge coming from the broken link.
It would be much appreciated //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/biggrin.gif.d71a5d36fcbab170f2364c9f2e3946cb.gif
hwc----a 3:1 gain oerlap will rarely result in "hard clipping" with music material----thats why it is not audible---the facts are that if the gains are set for 1:1 with typical music material the most amount of AVERAGE POWER you can achieve is about 10% of the amps rated power----this means that the 100 watt amp would only deliver about 10 average watts to the speakers-----will that protect them?----you bet it will-----just like keeping a Ferrari in first gear----but does that seem reasonable?-------a reasonable overlap will allow use of a lot more of the amps power and takes advantage of our inability to hear the effect of short term events...........RC
Thanks guys for the contributions. And let's not forget that we don't record our music CDs at AHB (All High Bits) for every bit of the music. There are quiet passages, average passages, and places where all 16 bits are high (i.e. max loud). Likewise, we don't listen to our music at full volume all the time. (Well, most of us don't, eh?)