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speakers and rms watts

Printed From: the12volt.com
Forum Name: Car Audio
Forum Discription: Car Stereos, Amplifiers, Crossovers, Processors, Speakers, Subwoofers, etc.
URL: https://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp?tid=91884
Printed Date: May 01, 2024 at 12:07 AM


Topic: speakers and rms watts

Posted By: 82Firebird
Subject: speakers and rms watts
Date Posted: March 19, 2007 at 9:06 PM

I've finally decided to replace the crappy 2 channel amp I have powering my 6.5" Alpine Type R components with a 4 channel to power the components as well as the Alpine Type R 6x9's in the sail panels.

My question is this: how many watts over the RMS power can you go without potential hazard to the speakers. I realize the RMS rating is the rating which is recommended for optimal performance from the manufacturer. The amp I was thinking about going with would give each of these speakers 100 watts RMS. The components are rated at 70 watts RMS while the 6x9's are 55 watts RMS.

I've heard of guys running components rated at 50 watts RMS with over 100 watts RMS. Is this crazy, or typical? I've always played things pretty safe with wattages but now I'm wondering if I'm too critical.



Replies:

Posted By: aznboi3644
Date Posted: March 19, 2007 at 9:23 PM
The RMS power rating is NOT the power rating for OPTIMAL performance...it is a basic power handling rating...in full range.

If you high pass a speaker it will raise the power handling.




Posted By: haemphyst
Date Posted: March 19, 2007 at 9:26 PM
Zero watts. The RMS rating is how much power the speaker can take, electrically. It has no bearing on "performance". It is not a recommended power by the manufacturer, it is a terminal power. Anything OVER that, on a continuous basis, will be TERMINAL.

aznboi3644 wrote:

The RMS power rating is NOT the power rating for OPTIMAL performance...it is a basic power handling rating...in full range.

If you high pass a speaker it will raise the power handling.

This is wrong too. 100 watts whether it is 100 watts at 100Hz and up or true full range is 100 watts. If it is more than the driver can take on a continuous basis, you will fry the driver.

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Posted By: 82Firebird
Date Posted: March 19, 2007 at 9:38 PM
Ok so, what's my risk of killing them by giving them each 100watts? Or should I just meet the RMS wattage of each speaker?




Posted By: DYohn
Date Posted: March 20, 2007 at 10:31 AM
Your risk of "killing" a speaker rated for 70 watts by feeding it 100 watts continuously is 100%.  However head room is a good thing as you do not want to operate any amp at its max output for very long.  You will not likely operate the system at max volume all the time will you?  100 watts is probably fine, just be sure to set your gain properly and pay attention to your volume control and to sounds of distress from your speakers, and turn it down if you detect any.

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Posted By: aznboi3644
Date Posted: March 20, 2007 at 4:44 PM
haemphyst wrote:

Zero watts. The RMS rating is how much power the speaker can take, electrically. It has no bearing on "performance". It is not a recommended power by the manufacturer, it is a terminal power. Anything OVER that, on a continuous basis, will be TERMINAL.

aznboi3644 wrote:

The RMS power rating is NOT the power rating for OPTIMAL performance...it is a basic power handling rating...in full range.

If you high pass a speaker it will raise the power handling.

This is wrong too. 100 watts whether it is 100 watts at 100Hz and up or true full range is 100 watts. If it is more than the driver can take on a continuous basis, you will fry the driver.


Sorry...I mean high pass as it will raise power handling as in less likely to reach the speakers mechanical limits before its thermal limits





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