When we think about watts in a multi way speaker, are there any convenient, fact based rules for how power is distributed in music an therefore drivers?
According to Eminence:
"As a general rule of thumb, we estimate that the high frequency driver will see about 20% of the system power with a 1.5 kHz-2.5 kHz crossover, 15% with a 3.5 kHz-5 kHz crossover, and 10% with a 5 kHz and up crossover (all based on a minimum 12dB/octave slope)."
https://eminence.com/blogs/blog/high-frequency-driver-power-handling
"As a general rule of thumb, we estimate that the high frequency driver will see about 20% of the system power with a 1.5 kHz-2.5 kHz crossover, 15% with a 3.5 kHz-5 kHz crossover, and 10% with a 5 kHz and up crossover (all based on a minimum 12dB/octave slope)."
https://eminence.com/blogs/blog/high-frequency-driver-power-handling
With a 2-way crossover, the 50-50 power split is generally something in between 300-500 Hz in most types of music.
I thought you might find this interesting. It's the spectral content of music visualized. You can see the tonal balance of different types of music.
The graphs below are FFT analysis of different music genres. The files analyzed for the this test are the average of approximately 112 different recordings in each genre. I averaged those recordings and plotted the spectrum.
Note that the graphs do NOT show how loud the tracks were mastered, because all tracks were normalized before averaging them. That allows for the overlay on one of the plots. The plots just show tonal balance. You...
The graphs below are FFT analysis of different music genres. The files analyzed for the this test are the average of approximately 112 different recordings in each genre. I averaged those recordings and plotted the spectrum.
Note that the graphs do NOT show how loud the tracks were mastered, because all tracks were normalized before averaging them. That allows for the overlay on one of the plots. The plots just show tonal balance. You...
- Pano
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From the Eminence Loudspeaker Book:
Crossover frequency (Hz) | Percentage power above crossover point |
150 | 80 |
200 | 72 |
300 | 55 |
500 | 40 |
1000 | 25 |
3000 | 20 |
5000 | 10 |
Rule of Thumb. On second read I found the meaning changed quite for the better 😀that old RoT
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