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![]() | #31 |
BHPian Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Delhi
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier 6dB is twice the electrical power. Twice the sound power (human perception) is not 2x but 2^10. Or 10dB. If you wanted 5 times the (acoustic) power it would be 5^10. Edit: About speakers being linear or not, that is dependent on many factors. Some professional speakers will run up to 130dB without breaking a sweat all day, which is enough to damage your hearing. Of course monstrous amounts of power and very careful design is required to hit those levels. This is not applicable for home audio. At home you normally don't exceed 85dB (or shouldn't) at your listening position. This means that good recordings with peaks of up to 15-20dB may be enjoyed without going deaf. Edit again: Here's another link that explains the confusion between x2 and ^10. http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-levelchange.htm Of course the best source to learn from is the Master handbook of Acoustics (Walton). Last edited by cranky : 21st June 2011 at 09:18. |
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![]() | #32 | |||
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
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Also loudness perception will reduce too (simply because there is no compression near the peaks of the music) For a custom design, given that most car cabins are less than 2mx2mx1m in size, and have a lot of absorbent material in the car, frequencies less than 100Hz will have a hard time forming standing waves in any dimension of the car. I may be wrong here (please correct me in that case) but low frequency boxes should be very much possible if they are sealed on one side and hae a moving diaphragm on the other side. Rather than creating a pressure wave, you'll be compressing and decompressing the air in the entire cabin (the ear of course wouldn't know the difference) For high frequencies - absorbent materials should be good, otherwise not much of a problem. Mid-range can and will set up standing waves - is there any standard solution? Quote:
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![]() | #33 | |||||
Senior - BHPian ![]() Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Bangalore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
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And, contrary to what you think, changing to better speakers is the first place where you gain the most - all the people here who changed from stock OE speakers to good components without changing anything else will vouch for it. Quote:
@cranky is trying to convey something else. | |||||
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![]() | #34 | ||||
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
In the past good quality drivers were expensive and hard to get, DSP was not even an option. Today that is not so (I remember you talking about advancement in technology on another thread - I was referring to the same thing) cheap CMOS DSPs, and HVCMOS drivers give high power very linear drivers. I myself designed one (100V peak output into 20ohms, linear all the way to 5MHz - diagnostic ultrasound so the measurements are not based on the fickle human ear) along with its receiver. For these applications, nobody cares about perception, you can't hear these frequencies anyway - linearity is the king (or you lose information via intermodulation) and so is SNR. And since non-linearities still exist they use techniques like calibration, pre-distortion and equalisation. Quote:
Almost all power transfer in the natural world happens through wave phenomenon (either mechanical waves like sound, or electromagnetic waves) - for small dimensions compared to wavelength you can approximate things as lumped components (e.g. the rigidity approximation in kinematics) In a speaker power transfer happens at two point - coil+magnet transfers it to diaphragm (or equivalent) moving to and fro, and diaphragm via its movement transfers the energy to air. Diaphragm + air acts as a spring-mass system (and rigid or semi-rigid diaphragm will also have their own springiness) hence the resonance at low frequencies (along with shape/size of cone - at higher frequencies further complications) All of the mechanical resonance etc. will show up in the input impedance curve for the speaker - the resistive component of this curve (minus the resistance of the coil at DC) will correspond to the power transfer from electrical to sound, the inductive (or capacitive - if it ever gets there) component will only cause to reduce the output power. Most drivers act as voltage sources (current limited) with very low output resistance (compared to the speaker) - impedance match is alrready non existent. However if the impedance is varying with frequency too, then the power delivered will also vary. Equaliser can help with this by reducing the power at frequencies where the impedance is lower (peak voltage is constrained, so equaliser will not help at high-impedance) By the way, when I was in college, impedance matching, reflection coefficients etc. were used in many contexts (all related to wave propagation) - ultrasound, transmission lines, free space radio waves (including optical and beyond visible) ... Quote:
The context was Jinu spending time and effort in actually understanding acoustics, speakers and other details of the overall sound system (I would venture it includes his ear too) - if someone is going into that much detail then he might as well look at all the surfaces in his car too. This is like saying that get the acoustics of your concert hall fixed before you think about expensive equipment. Of course, for most people (all people? - includes me anyway) all of that will be impossible, and the only reasonable course left is to replace the speakers. Quote:
By the way, Philips did blind tests and MOST aficionados can not detect anything but loudness of music. In fact what most people call "good music" is actually pretty badly distorted - crest factor of naturally produced music can be over 20dB, crest factor of CDs in the market is between 6dB and 9dB. I think I'm aware of my ears' limitations and most people are not - that's the only difference (apart from the fact that this allows me to save cash) there is another psychological play here. Once you know the true cost of many of the things you purchase, you may never buy stuff again. e.g. A pretty good crystal oscillator costs less than 10 cents in low volumes - I haven't bought a watch since I found that out. He clarified as much via the articles. Thanks. I read the articles after writing that post. | ||||
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![]() | #35 | |
Team-BHP Support ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Mumbai
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
Yes the enviroment should also be considered but since the speaker is the one link in the audio chain that converts energy from one from to another (electrical to mechanical) it will have the most losses and hence this is where most of allocate most money to. Lastly the man in the box is a terribel enviroment. When I was little (about 14 years old) I was small made (the paunch is a post 40s phenomenon) and actually crawled into a the back of a Marshall Stack to listen to the guitars of a Mumbai based Rock Band called Atomic Forest and it sounded terrible. I used to sit right at the foot of Ranjit Barot's (ex-Peoples) bass drum to determine the effect of direct sound vs reflected sound. | |
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![]() | #36 | |
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
Navin if you get an expensive speaker system, with equalisers, you can get a flat response. The all the "effects" you pay expensive fad designers for can be obtained for via DSP. Man-in-box is not bad at all if the system is designed for that (concert hall acoustics is an example) - if you crawl into a loudspeaker and get deaf as a result that is your own doing, not even a bad design on the designers' part (they never would have thought you would do so). Some ten years ago, a sound company approached Analog Devices and asked them to build amplifiers and drivers - they didn't know much about frequency response but they did know this - "harmony is when nothing is random, temperature = entropy = disorder = lack of harmony" Next thing you know they ask Analog Devices that their chips must be made at Absolute Zero (i.e. 0 Kelvin). ADI guys had a hard time explaining these fools that not only is this impossible, it'll be useless. | |
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![]() | #37 | ||
BHPian Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Delhi
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
The impedance is governed by the driver, the box and the air inside the box. It is also affected by seemingly minor things such as the shape of the baffle and how the driver is placed along it, and if the driver is countersunk or not. If you take the exact same driver and put it in a different box, the repsonse will be different. This is why we hope that every amplifier is a perfect voltage source so it is not affected by impedance. The voltage in your house doesn't change significantly even if you turn on every single thing because the impedance of the load is far higher than the impedance of the source. We try to achieve the same thing when designing an amplifier, specially for demanding loads like subwoofers. Some specific applications call for an amp with a high output impedance, but those are specific to the speaker and application in question. Quote:
The fact is that there is no theoretically perfect speaker. It is an electromechanical device, and is constrained by physics and available materials. We all know what we want from a speaker - perfect impulse response, zero distortion and coverage of every note audible to man with no deviation. This is not achievable - ever - at least not with current technology. If you study motor design (speaker motor, not the ones we usually discuss here), for example, you will realise that some of these goals in fact conflict each other. And this is before the cone has even moved. | ||
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![]() | #38 | |
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
I agree with the second part of your post (what is there to disagree?) however either I didn't understand what you wanted to say, or you are getting the concept of impedance completely wrong. Impedance is not resistance - more precisely, impedance is not resistance only. Resistance corresponds to that part of impedance which models energy lost from the electrical network (in the form of heat, EM waves, sound ...). For example, a speaker (or any other system) with an inductance of 0.1 Henry and resistance of 10ohms will be able to draw at best 0.1A from a perfect voltage source driving 160Hz sinusoid with 10Vrms. The output power (neglecting heat losses) of the amplifier will be less than 0.1W as a result. The same speaker/amplifier pair, at 32Hz on the other hand will get almost 0.4A of current, and output power will be over 1.6W. When your speaker is near resonance, the impedance matching between its moving parts (diaphragm etc.) and air will be very poor, electrical input as a result will show a high complex (as in complex numbers, not as in complexity) impedance - limiting the current form the driver and as a result limiting the power output (in W, but not in VA). Now changing the box, cone, even the room characteristics (for a small room with reflective surfaces for example) will influence acoustic resonance properties - and in turn the effective electrical input impedance. | |
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![]() | #39 | |||
Team-BHP Support ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Mumbai
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
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2. The is NO perfect speaker. Period. You can ask Richard Vandsersteen, David Wilson, anyone. They will all tell you the same thing. 3. Lastly flat (as measured by measuring instruments) frequency response is not even desireable. It is vey hard on the ears. Using a DSP (or any other method) to achieve a flat response is hence redundant. Besides more important that just frequency resppnse is impulse and timbre. This is what makes one speaker prefered over another. Last edited by navin : 22nd June 2011 at 10:41. | |||
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![]() | #40 | |||
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
why I still wrote about impedance: The example he gave of house supplies is irrelevant, and perfect voltage source. And also he wrote " This is why we hope that every amplifier is a perfect voltage source so it is not affected by impedance. " I wanted to clarify that even with a perfect voltage source he will not get flat response if the speaker goes into acoustic resonance. Quote:
I don't have to ask anybody - high school physics tells me as much. When your frequency range spans 3 decades, it is not possible to have flat response. With half an octave it is very hard. That is why three speakers are used in general - and that is why even three are not enough. Quote:
I didn't say you can use DSP to get a flat response (though that is possible too). What I said was if you get a flat response amplifier onwards, then all the fancy stuff (timber for example, reverberations is another, echo is a third one ...) can be done in DSP. You don't have to pay any of the big names you have been dropping for anything. To get a flat response in the first place you need caliberation tools and a good equaliser - no DSP needed (though, as I wrote above, DSP can help) and why would a flat response not be desirable? I mean you may want your music to be adulterated by distortions, but if I want my Lata Mangeshar as she sounded at the recording studio, why the hell would I want some fad sounding overpriced fashion icon to change the frequency response of my system? And why would I later want to spend money to get a good equaliser merely to (while not even knowing this is going on) compensate for the non-flat frequency response of the speakers when the speakers are non-flat by design. flat frequency response of the speakers and amplifiers doesn't mean "flat music" - all it means is that no specific tone is amplified more than the other. Last edited by vina : 22nd June 2011 at 11:22. | |||
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![]() | #41 |
BHPian Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Delhi
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier To clarify - I thought *you* were talking about the electrical resistance mismatch between an amplifier and the driver's electrical bits. When it comes to acoustic impedance, obviously it is a different ballgame and very difficult to estimate exactly - which was my point. What's worse is that it not only changes with frequency, but also level - so a sub being run at 80dB average presents a very different load than one being run at 90dB average because the air inside the box becomes a significant impedance issue. Which as I see, you already know ![]() |
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![]() | #42 | |
Senior - BHPian ![]() Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Bangalore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
99.999% of the people who want to listen to music would find a user-controllable DSP an irritant at best. Even a majority of the DSP box manufacturers use it initially only to correct the bias imposed in the source - the OE HU - to make crappy OE speakers sound acceptable in an imperfect environment. The next most commonly used function in the DSP is to time-align the output from imperfectly positioned speakers. You, on the other hand, seem to think that DSP is the do all - end all of the music world. A listener *does not want* a specific timbre, reverberation or echo just to be able to relate to a certain experience, for example a concert hall. If I want to listen to a Kishore Kumar song, I would like to immerse myself into the song - the lyrics, the notes, the beats ... - not to find out the difference had the song been sung on stage, even though the original recording was in studio. THAT, my friend, is left for people who want to modify everything without getting up from in front of the PC. Why PC? PC users are thrilled to bits by the infinite controllability offered by various add-on DSP modules to modify the crappy sound that comes out from crappy equipment. And then the desire for 'modification' takes over their lives instead of music. ![]() If you care to notice, practically none of the OTS audio mid-to-high_end equipment give such redundant facilities to users. The low-end mass-market guys do (everyone from Sony to Nippon to no-name you-know-where-it-came-from) - but usually that is marketing gimmick. Almost all users who simply want to listen to music cannot figure out whether they should like the reverb introduced or not. K.I.S.S. principles, sir. Not everything that is theoretically possible is at all practically desirable. Navin has been trying to convey this - twice, in case you have not noticed. | |
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![]() | #43 | |
Team-BHP Support ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Mumbai
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
As far as a flat response is concerned - a flat response while nice to see in a lab often has too much high frequency energy to make for a pleasant listening experience. This may also be because many recordings are poor equalised. Off Topic: Two processors I intend to get some day are the Behringer DEQ2496 and the Behringer DCX2496. The former is a DSP, the later a crossover; but both are cheap enough to be affordable by common folk like us. Granted DSP has found great use in PA systems (JBL's Vertec for exmaple) and many companies like BSS and Rane produce DSP solutions for PA and line-array systems. However the acceptance for DSP in home audio is still limited. Last edited by navin : 22nd June 2011 at 13:17. | |
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![]() | #44 | |||
Senior - BHPian Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Ghaziabad/Hyderabad/Mysore
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
DSP processors have no practical limitations save for the limitations of micropohone-amplifier-ADC {DSP} DAC - amplifier - speaker. In fact DSP is used to correct for a lot of imperfections in the rest of the chain. The limitations come from impossiblity of perfect calibration (especially at all power levels), different ear responding differently etc. One limitation I have already written about is that perfect equalisation with DSP will not increase your peak power output from speaker, rather what it will do is if (for example) at 100Hz the speaker could output 70dBA, and at 50Hz it could output 65dBA - the DSP based equaliser will make it 65dBA everywhere - it can not increase the peak power, but it can decrease the output power everywhere. This is obviously highly undesirable (especially if the limiting band is one where human hearing perception is poor to begin with, and the band sacrificed is one where human perception is sharp) - you may end up getting worse performance overall than you started with. Make no mistakes - I was not saying that you should get flat response via DSP - I was saying you can (while sacrificing power and money) ADC is needed for recording - not a factor for our discussion anyway. DACs today are so good (if you have money to spend, and electricity to burn) they can generate more dynamic range that human hearing. Quote:
![]() But that doesn't mean that with a system that gives flat response you have to hear music that is flat (perfectly flat and stationary audio will sound like noise anyway - because it is noise). A flat system will not make music flatter than it already is. What a flat system does is it gives the same amount of amplification to all frequencies - so it sounds exactly same as at recording. On the other hand if a system's response is not flat, it'll add distortion that the recording studio never intended - that is not ture reproduction What happens in studios is that they record everything with a flat response recording system BUT the sound coming from the instruments and vocal ccords already has lower energy at higher frequencies - so you do not get a flat frequency spectrum. AFTER recording, a lot of work is done further on the sound. For example, for human conversation, crest factor (ratio of the lowest and highest sound power measured over a reasonably short time period - usually 20ms) is usually roughly 10dB. For most singers it is more (closer to 14dB) when they sing. Very accomplished singers that are renowned to have large range can have almost 20dB of crest factor while singing (from very faint to very loud). However almost all CD (or DVD) cutting these days (unless it says "classical" on its cover) is done close to 6dB crest factor - people want loud - they get loud. Even the old songs are distorted in this way "digitally mastered" stuff is exactly this. This conversion is done using DSP at the studio. Quote:
As I explained above, any audio equipment that is dealing with digital audio (and that means anything except tape and vinyl records) already has DSP, whether you like it or not. And contrary to your belief - more expensive systems have much more in DSP. For example @cranky wrote about impedance changing with amplitude. Now this happens with all big speakers - it is called speaker non-linearity. Let us say you somehow obtain a two-tone music file ( say 500Hz and 2KHz pure tones) and you play that file through this speaker at high volume, and the use a sensitive microphone and electronics to analyse what is coming out of the speaker. If you did this - you'll find other frequencies (biggest power will be at 1.5kHz, next biggest at 2.5kHz) also present - this is what non-linear distortion does to you. Now at high volume your ear may not perceive the difference - that is one way to go, or the designers of the speaker already know about this and inject a signal at 1.5kHz (and 2.5kHz) on purpose that is going to be out of phase (i.e. negative of) with the new 1.5kHz being generated - destructive interference will ensure they kill each other. Speaker will be highly non-linear, but the DSP in the speaker driver will still allow a linear (but not necessarily flat in frequency domain) response. | |||
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![]() | #45 | |
Team-BHP Support ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Mumbai
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| Re: How to calculate the efficiency of the Amplifier Quote:
Sadly most recordings (especially the vintage ones) are terrible and hence are often more listenable on loudspeakers that are less "transparent". We have digressed enough so let's get back to the topic on hand. | |
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