Just to prove to my friend if a power amp has 24db of gain, what is it's input voltage sensitivity for full 90w output, he's watching
Cheers George
Cheers George
Last edited:
if a power amp has 24db of gain, what is it's input voltage sensitivity for full 90w output.
90W into 8R --> VxV/8R=90 W --> V= 26.8V output voltage at 90W
Gain=24dB --> 24=20 x log(26.8/Vin) --> Vin= 1.69V input voltage for full output voltage/power
All voltages in Vrms.
Last edited:
Incomplete question, you did not mention load impedance.Just to prove to my friend if a power amp has 24db of gain, what is it's input voltage sensitivity for full 90w output, he's watching
Cheers George
Without that, any answer is just a guess.
Unless it includes "all answers", meaning a sensitivity vs. impedance table.
Incomplete question, you did not mention load impedance.
Without that, any answer is just a guess.
Unless it includes "all answers", meaning a sensitivity vs. impedance table.
90w 8ohms
Cheers George
Incomplete question, you did not mention load impedance.
Without that, any answer is just a guess.
Or you assume the customary 8 ohms, as Ray did.
Andy
Rayma guessed the speaker impedance correctly and gave the correct answer for full power sensitivity.
Vmax = sqrt(max power * Speaker Impedance) = sqrt (90*8) = 26.8Vac
Gain factor = invLog(dBgain / 20) = inLog(24/20) = 15.85
Sensitivity = Vmax / Gain factor = 26.8/15.85 = 1693mVac
Any CDP and similar digital source will need to be attenuated to prevent the amplifier from clipping.
Vmax = sqrt(max power * Speaker Impedance) = sqrt (90*8) = 26.8Vac
Gain factor = invLog(dBgain / 20) = inLog(24/20) = 15.85
Sensitivity = Vmax / Gain factor = 26.8/15.85 = 1693mVac
Any CDP and similar digital source will need to be attenuated to prevent the amplifier from clipping.
helpful... but if i'm given an amplifier schematic on the web or on this forum ..just the schematic with no specs is there any way to know it's gain in order to calculate the input sensitivity....
Gotcha. Then yes the gain can be calculated. It would depend upon the circuit topology. For example for an amplifier using negative feedback the gain is set by the negative feedback potential divider network
If it is a conventional circuit, acting like the non-inverting opamp configuration, then you can work out the gain from the feedback components. You can estimate the power output from the supply rail voltage.
This might be a good place for you to start. Elliott Sound Products - Audio Power Amplifier Design Guidelines It's difficult to know what to recommend without knowing more about what you do and don't know. But I hope this is helpful and there is a lot more information on ESP pages for all levels
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Source & Line
- Analog Line Level
- db gain vs input sensitivity