I have 2 Speakers here from a National Radio. It has an impedance of 8 ohms and a Peak Input of 165W. What does that two values mean?
The impedance is a measure of the electrical resistance (mostly) and the peak input indicates what power level can be applied to the speakers. Peak is poor way of rating it. Realistically if they are rated at 165W peak the actual power rating in RMS (root, mean, squared) will be about half that or less. (read 75watts)
Cal
Cal
Without getting too involved here:
The 8 ohm speakers will be fine with almost any amplifier.
The wattage rating is fine for either amp provided you do not turn it up too loud. The 100 watt amp can still blow your speakers just like the 170 watt can. Just use your better judgement when it comes to the volume.
Cal
The 8 ohm speakers will be fine with almost any amplifier.
The wattage rating is fine for either amp provided you do not turn it up too loud. The 100 watt amp can still blow your speakers just like the 170 watt can. Just use your better judgement when it comes to the volume.
Cal
Oh.. it's 6 ohms. Not 8 ohms. Typo.
Can anyone tell what this values are/for?
Channels per transformer
Rail voltage
Power in Watts
Transformer voltage VCT
Load in Ohms
Minimum VA
R2R in Volts
Can anyone tell what this values are/for?
Channels per transformer
Rail voltage
Power in Watts
Transformer voltage VCT
Load in Ohms
Minimum VA
R2R in Volts
You've gone form asking about speaker impedance to wanting to build your own amplifier in two days.
You have done a lot of reading it appears.
Cal
You have done a lot of reading it appears.
Cal
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