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Conference terri::cars_uk

Title:Cars in the UK
Notice:Please read new conference charter 1.70
Moderator:COMICS::SHELLEYELD
Created:Sun Mar 06 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2584
Total number of notes:63384

1281.0. "Speaker Problem !" by CHEFS::EDINBOROUGHS (Not Ken Dodd's Lovechild) Thu Nov 01 1990 20:15

    
    I have what appears to be a standard Clarion car hi-fi.  Recently I
    bought a pair of 100w Bass reflex speakers.  Assuming that the stereo
    is pumping out a relatively lower output in comparsion, I would expect 
    the speakers to be able to handle the output without any distorsion 
    etc. 
    However is doesn't take much of a turn on the volume knob to blast them
    out.  
    
    Any comments appreciated ... 
    
    
    Stephen.
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1281.1SUBURB::PARKERGISSAJOBThu Nov 01 1990 20:439
    I can't remember the calculations, but you want to make sure that the
    impedance is right. If not properly matched, this could give the effect
    you have noticed, particularly if your Clarion is rated RMS, and the
    speakers are music power.
    
    I suggest that you give us the power/impedance of both amp and
    speakers, and that may give us a clue.
    
    Steve
1281.2Its the amp.CRATE::WATSONRik WatsonFri Nov 02 1990 11:164
    What you probably hearing is the amplifier clipping. Its usually a
    better idea to have a large amp and small speekers (power wise).
    
    See UK_AUDIO (MARVIN:: ?) for more discussions.
1281.3have them with same ratings!HOO78C::DUINHOVENWeird scenes inside the colemine...Fri Nov 02 1990 11:406
    The output rating and matching speaker values should not differ a lot.
    You'll loose a lot of sound quality when they don't.
    
    You don't carry a small parcel in a big lorry as well!
    
    Hans
1281.4CHEFS::EDINBOROUGHSNot Ken Dodd's LovechildFri Nov 02 1990 12:3521
    
    I know the speakers to have a 4 ohms impedance.  The hi-fi was given to
    me by my father who ripped it out of his old car.  Unfortunately it
    doesn't have a sticker on it displaying the power.  Is there a quick
    way of testing this apart from ripping open the casing ?
    
    One point I forgot to mention it that when four speakers are connected,
    the other two being door mounted Blaunkplunt's, the quality of sound is
    greatly enhanced.  The 100w speakers decide to throw out more power
    and they have much better response in all frequencies, but I believe 
    they are still not reaching their potential.
    
    Another thing I noticed on the sticker of the 100w speakers is :-
    Nominal power 50w.
    
    Does this mean that my hi-fi has to throw out 50w of power before the
    speakers decide they want to work correctly ?
    
    Thanks for the replies so far,
    
    Stephen.
1281.5SUBURB::PARKERGISSAJOBFri Nov 02 1990 14:128
    Again, I forget which way round it is, but if you wire an extra pair of
    speakers in parrallell (or is it series?) you half the impedance, and
    in series (or is it paralel) you double it. You also cut the perceived
    power at the speaker by more than half. It all looks like the speakers
    are ill matched to the amp. If it sounds better with all four
    connected, why not just run them like that?
    
    Steve
1281.650W RMSHOO78C::DUINHOVENWeird scenes inside the colemine...Fri Nov 02 1990 15:077
    50 Watts nominal means RMS (Root means squire).
    This is the real power possible with sinuswave.
    The 100 W means peak load.
     Anyway I could not live with 50 watts noise in a car.
     Must be more than 100 db in such a small compartment!
    
    Hans
1281.7Wrong impedance???VIVIAN::M_ELLAWAYFri Nov 02 1990 15:508
    When you said the speakers work alot better when you connect another
    two speakers to your system and that your speakers are 4ohm impedance
    you are probably connecting them in series therefore doubling impedance
    to 8ohms. As far as I can remember speakers tend to be either 4 or 8
    ohms impedance, so it sounds like you have the wrong type of speakers
    if you want just the two for your stereo.
    
    Regards Martin
1281.8Use the front/rear outputs in SeriesSUBURB::SCREENERRobert Screene, UK Finance EUCFri Nov 02 1990 21:1633
    Steven,
    
    You will probably find the output of most amps in a Radio/Cassette is
    rated around:
    	 20 watts PEAK output x 2
    	  6 watts RMS output x 2.
    
    I agree with the crowd, it's probably the amp's clipping distortion you
    are hearing.  Check the installation manual about wiring for 2
    speakers.  There will be 4 wire pairs comming out of the set
    (negative is the black/colour striped one of each pair).
    
    If there are only 2 pairs comming out, and you are wiring in parallel
    forget the following paragraph...
    
    You will probably find that when only driving 2 channels you should use
    the positive wire from the FRONT and the negative wire from the REAR
    output.  So you will be using the front and rear internal amps in
    series.  Don't just leave the front or the rear wires redundant.
    
    Important:
    Get hold of an installation guide for that Clarion model.  It may be
    that the above will not apply (and may ruin the internal amps
    immediately).   It may also be that the positive supply comes from the 
    rear, and negative from the front.
    
    Rob.
    
    p.s. I have speakers rated at 200w peak input, they still distort when
    their amplifier is driven into clipping. 
    
    p.p.s.  Yes I know 200w for a full-range speaker in a car is wild, but
    I didn't but them for volume/SPL, they just sound superb!
1281.9Out of phase?SUBURB::SCREENERRobert Screene, UK Finance EUCFri Nov 02 1990 21:198
    You may also find that you wired the speakers out of 'phase'.  Perhaps
    got the +/- output swapped at the speakers.
    
    It sounds really stupid I know, but I noticed my manufacturer supplied
    cables had the wrong shaped terminals at the end. This caused me to get
    it wrong, because I didn't bother to check the manufacturer's work.
    
    Rob.
1281.10Crypto-Political Techno-RantKURMA::PFERGUSONFri Nov 02 1990 21:4247
    
    
    Be careful of connecting the speakers in parallel.
    
    This can damage your amp. 
    
    ( Your home HiFi/Stack System/Music centre will likely say on the back
    'use only speakers with nominal impedance 8ohms or greater.......for
    similar reasons ) 
    
    The reduced impedance means the amp tries to deliver too much current for a
    given voltage and this can consequently waste the output transistors. 
    
    This is a result obtained from the maximum power theorm, the best you
    can ever do is to deliver as much power as you dissapate internally in
    the amp. This happens when impedances are exactly matched, something no
    loudspeaker will ever manage....no matter what the manufaturer tells
    you the impedance is. 
    
    If you connect them in series and it sounds bad then the amp may
    not be powerful enough to drive the higher impedance.
    
    This manifests itself as 'clipping' ( as a previous correspondent correctly 
    pointed out.)  
    
    Clipping should be avoided as it can damage you speakers.
    
    He was also correct in saying to use a bigger rated amp than the speakers.
    Car speakers tend to be efficient so you'd go deaf in ten minutes if you 
    drove them hard enough to damage them with too much (unclipped) power.
    
    A car's not the best place for audio investment, it's the wrong shape,
    made of the wrong things, too noisy and if you do have a decent tranny
    some chap will soon separate it from your car. 
    
    
    Whew, that tale grew in the telling......I think I'll go and find a
    HiFi notes conference and lie down for a while.
    
    
    Peter
    
    
    
    
    
    
1281.11Guage to Current Capacity (amps)SUBURB::SCREENERRobert Screene, UK Finance EUCTue Dec 04 1990 20:5139
1281.12PRFECT::PALKATue Dec 04 1990 22:4018
    I doubt you use 12 amps, unless you have very low impedance speakers.
    If your speakers are 4 Ohm then the current at 140 Watts (peak) is
    going to be about 6 Amps (peak). Your wire should not heat up to any
    appreciable amount - it would probably degrade audio performance if it
    had sufficient resistance to get warm. The spec for the wire may give
    the maximum power speakers that can be driven by it. Or to put it
    another way, you certainly dont want to waste even 10 watts of your
    amplifiers output in heating the wire. The current limit for the wire
    is not whether it is safe, but whether it produces good sound (which
    is lower than the safety limit).
    
    I believe that american mains wiring uses 14 gauge for a 15 Amp
    circuit, and 12 gauge for 20 Amps. This is run inside walls, conduits
    and other places where there is not much free air circulation. It is
    also ordinary cheap copper, not high quality copper which presumably
    has a lower resistance.
    
    Andrew
1281.13SWG-->METRIC-->IMPERIAL (but not necessarily in that order)...CHEFS::CLEMENTSDPublic Sector and TelecommsWed Dec 05 1990 12:0672
    Cross-posted from SILK::ENG_IN_MINIATURE .......
    
            <<< SILK::DUB1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]ENG_IN_MINIATURE.NOTE;1 >>>
                         -< ENGINEERING IN MINIATURE >-
================================================================================
Note 57.2                     SWG conversion table?                       2 of 3
CHEFS::CLEMENTSD "Public Sector and Telecomms"       61 lines   3-APR-1990 16:32
                      -< Full listing Of SWG Conversions >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Fuller list as follows.....
    
    	SWG		Inches		mm
         7/0		.500		12.700
         6/0		.464		11.786
         5/0		.432		10.793
         4/0		.400		10.160
         3/0		.372		9.449
         2/0		.348		8.839
         1/0		.324		8.230
         1		.300		7.620
         2		.276		7.010
         3		.252		6.401
         4		.232		5.893
         5		.212		5.385
         6		.192		4.877
         7		.176		4.470
         8		.160		4.064
         9		.144		3.658
         10		.128		3.251
         11		.116		2.946
         12		.104		2.642
         13		.092		2.337
         14		.080		2.032
         15		.072		1.829
         16		.064		1.626
         17		.056		1.422
         18		.048		1.219
         19		.040		1.016
         20		.036		.914
         21		.032		.813
         22		.028		.711
         23		.024		.610
         24		.022		.599
         25		.020		.508
         26		.018		.457
         27		.0164		.417
         28		.0148		.376
         29		.0136		.345
         30		.0124		.315
         31		.0116		.295
         32		.0108		.274
         33		.0100		.254
         34		.0092		.234
         35		.0084		.213
         36		.0076		.193
         37		.0068		.173
         38		.006		.152
         39		.0052		.132
         40		.0048		.122
         41		.0044		.112
         42		.004		.102
         43		.0036		.091
         44		.0032		.081
         45		.0028		.071
         46		.0024		.061
         47		.002		.051
         48		.0016		.041
         49		.0012		.030
         50		.001		.025
    
    
    Does this help?
1281.14SUBURB::SCREENERRobert Screene, UK Finance EUCWed Dec 05 1990 15:5815
    Thanks.
    
    Andrew,
    So perhaps 14-guage will have plenty current capacity, over my 140w
    peak output?
    
    Dave,
    How does one convert from guage/mm (solid core diam) into the 
    Metric notation for stranded cable (strands/mm-per-strand)?  
    
    I presume that you can't just divide by strands?
    
    i.e. 2.032 mm (14-guage) does not equate to 50/0.4064.
    
    Cheers, Rob.
1281.15CHEFS::CLEMENTSDPublic Sector and TelecommsWed Dec 05 1990 16:2711
    The SWG table gives a thickness (i.e diameter) from that you can work
    out the cross-sectional area. The metric Strands/thickness per strand
    can give a total cross-sectional area multiplying #'s of strands by the
    area of each strand. That should give a reasonably accurate
    relationship.
    
    Two copper wires of the same material and the same cross-sectional area
    should have the same resistance/unit length (specific resistance?) no
    matter whether they are solid or stranded. I always thought that wire
    was made from strands to make it more flexible. (Compare household
    2.5mm Twin with Earth mains cable with the flex on an electric kettle).
1281.16SUBURB::SCREENERRobert Screene, UK Finance EUCWed Dec 05 1990 22:3452
1281.17CHEFS::CLEMENTSDPublic Sector and TelecommsThu Dec 06 1990 12:289
    I don't think that SWG (Standard Wire Guage) and AWG (American Wire
    Guage) are the same, but I'll check in another source. Don't get hung
    up over the word "guage" it simply translates to "thickness".
    Historically it arose out of the need to "guage" or "measure" every
    piece of both plate and wire used for accuracy of nominal thickness
    because of the tolerances accepted in the manufacturing process. Not so
    necessary nowadays as when you get some sheet that is labelled 12SWG it
    will be 104 thou +/- 2 thou no matter where you buy it. Same for wire
    or rod. You can still buy the guages, though.