
Farview
Well-known member
Sonixx said:Sorry but... your formula is only good for DC... not AC... the transfer of AC power is very complex, but maximum power is transferred when the load and source impedances match. Impedance and restistance are not the same thing. While a speaker may measure around 4, 8 or 16 ohms resistance, the transformer will see an entirely different load. For an 8 ohm load the amp's output transformer will see anything from < 4 to > 16 ohms based on frequency. The transformers impedance also varies with frequency. Both the speaker and transformer are inductive in nature... but, when the amp's ouput load is mismatched, this plays havoc with the transformer and output circuitry in the amp. The power has to be delivered somewhere and usually the transformer ends up eating it by dissipating it as heat. While you may get away with a mismatch for some time, it's damaging your amp (output transformer and power tubes) in the long run. Also, the frequency response is not optimum.
True, that is the formula for DC, but at low frequencies it works virtually the same for AC, and still illustrates the point without going completely off the technical deep end. You however did a much better job of explaining it than I did. And the end result was the same, when you match the load of the amp and the speaker, there will be no volume difference. The volume diffference comes from the mismatch and the electrical chaos that ensues.