It is much easier to ruin a pair of speakers with to little power than with to much power. If you don't have enough power, then the speakers are playing with little control. The speakers voice coil won't mover over the bobbin properly, and will brush up against it causing friction and as a result heat. This heat will eventually damage the coils windings and the bobbins circular shape to be ruined.
If you buy speakers and they claim 100 watts RMS, then any amp you buy to power them should be AT LEAST 100 watts RMS (it is usualy a good idea to add 10-30% amp power over the speakers RMS rated power, so for this example Speaker=100 watts so amp should be at least 110-130). This is known as "Power Headroom."
Always use RMS output power figures, and NEVER "max" power figures for amplifiers. Many companies claim outrageous "Max" numbers as a sales lure, but their amps can only supply that power for a fraction of a second at EXTREMLY HIGH distortion numbers. Consider Max to be a number which will occur only if lightning strikes it (because that's what it is).
Here are some basics for buying an amplifier:
1) Make sure the THD numbers are LESS than .1% (your ears will thank you).
2) Make sure the amp has an RMS output power rating equal to or above that of the speaker(s) it will power.
3) Do not use Class D amplifiers for full range, bandpass, midrange, or high range speakers (class D does provide more power than A/B and WAY more than class A, but the distortion is significantly higher). If you can afford a Class A amplifier with enough RMS power for your speakers than you should buy it (unless you like the sound of a class A/B amplifier more).
4) This is not absolutley nessisary, but if you can afford an amplifier with a dampening factor of less than (or around) 50, than buy it. With a lower dampening factor and a high voltage output from your head unit you need to be carefull that your RCA inputs are securely plugged into your amplifier, because damage will occur if an RCA disconects while the stereo is on (sudden extreme change in electrical resistance). Amplifiers with dampening factors >50 also tend add less coloration to the signal, resulting in a cleaner, clearer, warmer sound. Some examples are: Celestra VA series (www.celestra.it); Audison HR-100, Thesis HV-214 (www.audison.com); and the McIntosh Labs MCC602TM (www.mcintoshlabs.com).
Hope this helps,
David
If you buy speakers and they claim 100 watts RMS, then any amp you buy to power them should be AT LEAST 100 watts RMS (it is usualy a good idea to add 10-30% amp power over the speakers RMS rated power, so for this example Speaker=100 watts so amp should be at least 110-130). This is known as "Power Headroom."
Always use RMS output power figures, and NEVER "max" power figures for amplifiers. Many companies claim outrageous "Max" numbers as a sales lure, but their amps can only supply that power for a fraction of a second at EXTREMLY HIGH distortion numbers. Consider Max to be a number which will occur only if lightning strikes it (because that's what it is).
Here are some basics for buying an amplifier:
1) Make sure the THD numbers are LESS than .1% (your ears will thank you).
2) Make sure the amp has an RMS output power rating equal to or above that of the speaker(s) it will power.
3) Do not use Class D amplifiers for full range, bandpass, midrange, or high range speakers (class D does provide more power than A/B and WAY more than class A, but the distortion is significantly higher). If you can afford a Class A amplifier with enough RMS power for your speakers than you should buy it (unless you like the sound of a class A/B amplifier more).
4) This is not absolutley nessisary, but if you can afford an amplifier with a dampening factor of less than (or around) 50, than buy it. With a lower dampening factor and a high voltage output from your head unit you need to be carefull that your RCA inputs are securely plugged into your amplifier, because damage will occur if an RCA disconects while the stereo is on (sudden extreme change in electrical resistance). Amplifiers with dampening factors >50 also tend add less coloration to the signal, resulting in a cleaner, clearer, warmer sound. Some examples are: Celestra VA series (www.celestra.it); Audison HR-100, Thesis HV-214 (www.audison.com); and the McIntosh Labs MCC602TM (www.mcintoshlabs.com).
Hope this helps,
David
02 DWP; all TRD parts for 2.4L HT; Gold mirror windows; Nordost Valhalla, Eclipse CD8455, Morel / Renaissance, A/D/S pq40.2, Rockford Fosgate 500m, Garret T3/T4 ceramic bearing turbo.
- Monkeyman
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