Measuring woofers at 2.83V/1m/8 Ohms: with or without load ?

Hi,

I'd like to do some basic frequency response (SPL) measurements on 4 of my old 12" 4Ohms woofers (20+ yrs old, noname, no datasheet).

I have REW and a MiniDSP UMIK-1.

I thought I can do a classic measurement at 1m/2.83V/4Ohms (and then converted into 8 Ohms terminology, final response will be 3dB lower in reality than what I get here).


How do we measure to get not perfect, but acceptable results (no near-field yet) ?

1. signal is 50Hz, set volume pot 'til I measure 2.83V on the terminals unloaded ?

2. same as 1) but with the drivers attached ? (So, with real load).

3. same as 1) but with a dummy load of 4 Ohms resistor and then leave the pot as is, amp is 'calibrated' and finally change the resistor to the driver for the actual measurement ?

Amp is a little cheap $2 Class D module up to the task I think (25W RMS max). If the speaker is attached, speaker terminal voltages fall a bit below 2.83V (compared to unattached) and vice-versa, if I calibrate 2.83V on the amp with the volume pot while driver is attached, unattached the measured voltage is higher on the terminals.

Where's the truth ? (I assume I can do an amp volume pot 'calibration' to nominal value with a dummy resistor just to know the best pot setting for the measurement and then measure the speaker as a real load, but still not sure). Since amps are mostly voltage devices I don't think output voltage shall change at all between loaded and unloaded states but I might be wrong.

:worship:
 
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Do (2). You could do (3) but your amp should be constant voltage regardless of load so it doesn’t matter if your woofers are a perfect 4 ohm or not. Don’t do (1) since some Class D amps can break if you run them without a load.

When you’ve set your volume knob to 2.83VAC @ -50Hz at the speaker terminals, double check if your amp puts out 2.83V also at 1kHz (although your DMM/voltmeter may not be fully accurate at 1,000 cycles.