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Some of these numbers enter the realm of bovine excrement. Think about it this way... Let's assume that a rock concert actually has max SPLs of 110dB.
And let's assume that you actually want to replicate that in your home (in my place it's not gonna happen). Given a 90dB sensitivity speaker, that's 20dB or 100 watts.
That's within the dynamic envelope of most 50 watt amps (tube for sure, SS more than likely.) Now here's where the "dynamic range" specification is stretched. The 100dB dynamic range spec for CD is based more on its signal to noise ratio, and potential recording capability, than actual recorded signal content. The number of recordings of any genre that are not compressed is miniscule, and in reality are more classical than anything else.
Show me a number of recordings that actually capture 100dB of dynamic range (thunder storms, trains, and jet planes excluded) and I'll agree with you, but until then these numbers just invite a circle jerk.
In 1996 English House/Electronica band Leftfield performed at a measured 137db.THX reference is 85db with 20db of headroom (so peaking at 105db). That's what you should hear in the center of a movie theater. (to set a reference most of us have experienced). 110db is reasonable, but it's not certain to include everyone. (also, as an aside: low-frequency can run up to 10db hotter) ...if you are 3' away.Every time you double the distance, you lose from 3db to 6db. So at a listening distance of 12ft, you'd be -6db to -12db from what your speakers are outputting. So 400w-1600w on a 90db speaker. I have run measurements on much of my audio library. The good CDs are peaking 12-17db above measured average (I did have one hit 21db). The modern ones are often doing 6-9db peaks. Technically anything that includes a silent moment and peaks at reference. But your point is valid.
High fidelity reproduction simply requires that we fill in fewer blanks
In 1996 English House/Electronica band Leftfield performed at a measured 137db.
Every time you double the distance, you lose from 3db to 6db. So at a listening distance of 12ft, you'd be -6db to -12db from what your speakers are outputting. So 400w-1600w on a 90db speaker.
I have run measurements on much of my audio library. The good CDs are peaking 12-17db above measured average (I did have one hit 21db). The modern ones are often doing 6-9db peaks.
Technically anything that includes a silent moment and peaks at reference. But your point is valid.
If that's the case, then everybody that attended that concert and did not use hearing protection, left with permanently damaged hearing.
Except that Rogers initial numbers, which is what I worked from, are based on both channels driven, thereby compensating for some of the distance roll off. Also, those attenuation numbers are only for point source speakers. Line sources and planars (again, Roger was working with his ESLs) drop off at less than half the rate. So, combining those 2 factors, my numbers work fine.
Thank you for validating my original statement that CDs are cut with peaks 20dB above mean.
Yes, but anything that is recorded in a real room (as opposed to a anechoic chamber), by a microphone (not including pure electronic tones) will have silent passages restricted to the noise floor of the room. Let's be generous and say that's 20dB, so the real dynamic range would be 80dB minus any compression or limiting, not the 100dB claimed. That's why I call the number BS.
I checked and discovered that I rarely play at 95 Db peaks. As a matter of fact, I found that trying to play at 105 Db peaks was uncomfortable. Hooking up my old Knight scope proved I need very little power at all. With my efficient speakers, and allowing for a small amount of clipping, 1-3 WPC is plenty. I'm firmly in Roger's camp.Steve
Steve, Thanks and congrats for being the first person in this discussion to actually measure what is going into the speaker. What was the peak voltage you measured at your listening level and what was your "clip" voltage? Can you also tell us what your speaker sensitivity is, your listening distance and average SPL level?
What Steve did is the most realistic and accurate way to determine what you need. Who cares what your listening level is or speaker sensitivity. Now Steve knows what voltage he needs and that's that. He can also measure the current with the scope or meter or calculate it from the impedance curve of the speaker.
It's all fine and good to spec SPL for a given voltage. But music isn't a sine wave.If you like the average level of your music at 90dB, a good recording is going to have as much as a 10:1 crest factor and more, which means instantaneous peaks to 100dB (string plucks, drum smacks, orchestral crescendos).You always need more power than you think in order to completely avoid clipping of the amplifier during actual musical program material.
I have to disagree with the posting that most speakers today are in the low 80 SPL for 1 watt. In my reading I see most conventional speakers in the high 80's. I think speaker sensitivity has improved over the years as driver manufacturers have learned how to make light cones sound good. I thank them for that because I can make a better sounding small amplifier than a large one and it costs less to own and operate. I note that most Wilson speakers are over 90 dB and his big ones are 93.5. Isn't it interesting that one of the biggest, heaviest most expensive speakers in the world is that efficient with a minimum recommended amplifier power of just 7 watts. Is Wilson trying to tell us something about small amplifiers sounding good?
Don't believe everything you read. Not uncommon for manufacturer's to boost the efficiency ratings by 3 dB or more (just one of those bench versus real world or more often simply a marketing ploy,
just like amplifier vendors). And take minimum amp recommendations with another grain of salt. They might work playing at very low spls in a closet with poor resolution (amp lacks a commanding grip to have control of the drivers) all the while trying to avoid clipping.