BassAdder60 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) Interested to know the difference in actual volume you would hear if you played a 500w class D amp into a 8ohm cab compared to same cab but 4ohms ? If I’m correct the amp would give out roughly half IE 250W and to be twice as loud audibly you would need 2500W which of course is silly for an amp ! I have a MarkBass MB58R 122 8ohm cab rated 800W and if this cab was say a 4ohm cab would it really sound louder even though amp can give it 500w at 4ohms ?? Edited 1 hour ago by BassAdder60 Quote
fretmeister Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago About as much as moving the volume control 2-3mm I reckon. Quote
SimonK Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago https://soundcertified.com/how-does-increasing-speaker-impedance-affect-db-output-power/ Quote
Lozz196 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago If I recall correctly we tried this at a Bass Bash once, same bass and 4ohm amp into the same cabs, both 4 & 8ohm versions. Again from recall no real noticeable volume difference but the 4ohm cab sounded more “alive” in comparison. 1 Quote
Bill Fitzmaurice Posted 53 minutes ago Posted 53 minutes ago It's not about watts, it's about voltage sensitivity. That's 3dB higher with 4 ohms, so with the same amp settings the 4 ohm speaker will be 3dB louder, assuming all the other T/S specs are the same, which they seldom are. 3dB is audible, but just. As for maximum SPL that's mainly determined by the cone displacement, T/S spec Vd. If Vd is the same maximum output will be the same, again if all the other specs are the same, which they seldom are. The 3dB increase in voltage sensitivity comes at the cost of drawing twice the current, which some amps don't deal with very well. 1 Quote
BassAdder60 Posted 24 minutes ago Author Posted 24 minutes ago 28 minutes ago, Bill Fitzmaurice said: It's not about watts, it's about voltage sensitivity. That's 3dB higher with 4 ohms, so with the same amp settings the 4 ohm speaker will be 3dB louder, assuming all the other T/S specs are the same, which they seldom are. 3dB is audible, but just. As for maximum SPL that's mainly determined by the cone displacement, T/S spec Vd. If Vd is the same maximum output will be the same, again if all the other specs are the same, which they seldom are. The 3dB increase in voltage sensitivity comes at the cost of drawing twice the current, which some amps don't deal with very well. So in real world experience this wouldn’t appear much louder to the listener ?? Quote
itu Posted 21 minutes ago Posted 21 minutes ago 23 minutes ago, Bill Fitzmaurice said: ...assuming all the other T/S specs are the same, which they seldom are. ...if all the other specs are the same, which they seldom are. ...voltage sensitivity comes at the cost of drawing twice the current, which some amps don't deal with very well. I might read the above like: Two speakers from the same manufacturer that look the same but have different impedances are two different speakers. Depending on the amp it is hard to say which speaker is really louder. Lower impedance may be harder load for the amp and therefore higher impedance cab can be even louder. Quote
BigRedX Posted 14 minutes ago Posted 14 minutes ago IME the whole point of amps that can drive 4Ω loads is not that swapping your 8Ω cab for a 4Ω one will make it louder but the fact that you can run two 8Ω cabs which if done properly will give you twice the driver area which will be noticeably louder, Quote
Kev Posted 3 minutes ago Posted 3 minutes ago I've never really understood why 4ohm 115/410/112 cabs are made, as I've always felt that they are designed to be in pairs or mixed with one another, and so should be 8ohm to come down to 4ohm total, unless you're running a 2ohm amp. More speakers = more air moved = louder. I suppose maybe if you're always running your amp at 11, maybe then it makes a bit more of a difference if you're running just one cab, provided the speak cone(s) have enough left to give? Quote
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