Voltage, power, impedance

Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
I wasn't sure where I should put this, so I guess it ends up here. Anyway, I'm a little confused about the relationship between peak voltage and RMS voltage as it relates to power and impedance. Let's say I have an amp with +/- 30VDC rails and it is driving a power resistor of 4 ohms. The Vp is 30V, so the Vrms = 30/1.414=21.2V. This is the value that I use for power calculations, right?

So P = V^2/R
P = 21.2^2/4
P=112W

Is this correct? If so, then I move on to the following calculation: an amp which needs to provide 100W to a 7-ohm load must have +/- 37.4VDC rails (assuming that it can rail), correct?

Vrms=sqrt(100*7)
Vrms=26.46V
Vp=26.46(1.414)=37.4VDC
 
that sounds about right. a while back i made up a "power guesstimation" chart based on rail voltage, peak voltage and p-p voltage so that techs wouldn't have to mess with a calculator when testing an amp. it's mostly "ballparked" values, but it works and saves a bit of time. as they used to say "it's close enough for rock and roll"......
 
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.