Farview,
What you don't seem to be getting is this: Distortion doesn't hurt speakers. Power does. Speaker failures people used to attribute to distortion, were really due to overpowering, even with a too small amp. New information has come out that shows this. The idea that distortion kills speakers is a busted myth. It was the prevailing view for thirty years, it is not anymore, as someone finally did the research to find out what was really happening.
I won't debate that guitar speakers are made differently and sound different. But they don't "handle" a certain type of signal better than any other kind of speaker with the same specs, with regards to durability.
You can run a 10W amp clipped to the max into a 1000W speaker all day long, and it will never fail. Why? The amp just doesn't make enough power.
That fact alone should make you think. If somehow distortion magically hurts PA speakers, why doesn't the 1000W speaker die? Because speaker failure is related to power. That is true for all speakers.
Farview said:
Guitar players run thier power amps into clipping as a matter of course, that's why it is a bad idea to do this.
Guitar cabinets have taken all this into account. PA and bass gear does not..
Most PA guys run their amps into clipping as well. I'd say more people clip their PA amps than clip their guitar amps, actually, since most people never run their guitar amps flat out, but will flog their PA amps and speakers without mercy, as modern limiters sound better and better, people can clip their stuff all day long and not care, cause it doesn't sound bad. Go to any club and look at the amp racks. Most people are like DJs, they only think it sounds good when everything is in the red.
Clipping is basically compression. It reduces dynamic range, and raises average level. In an amp, this means average power level is raised.
PA speakers only seem more susceptible, as guitars are very dynamic. Even a severely clipped guitar amp will be putting out that clipped signal for a very short time on average, giving the speaker more time to recover and shed heat. The average level is pretty low as opposed to severely clipped full program music, which may only have a few db dynamic range over time.
Farview said:
The printed specs of a guitar speaker and a PA speaker could read the same, but the guitar speaker will be able to handle a clipping amp a lot better, that is it's job.
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I'd like to see any speaker manufacturer make that claim and back it up, if both specs conform to AES standards.
Like I said, amp clipping is basically compression. Compression raises the average power level. A speaker's ability to handle amp clipping is only limited by how much power it can handle and dissipate.
A severely clipped amp has a raised power level. If the speaker can handle it, it won't blow. If it can't it will fry.