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    Inactive Member kevin@kab's Avatar
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    8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Hi,
    For the same input voltage, how much difference in level would you expect from an 8 ohm diaphragm, vs a 16ohm one? is there any data for this?
    for specifics, this is a pair of 291-16A original drivers. but the diaphragms were changed at one time to 8 ohm. One phram is damaged. If I replace it with a 16 ohm one, would the level mismatch be great or small?
    I prefer to stay with symbiotik's and I have a chance to get a 16 ohm nos one.

    Thanks
    Kevin

    Jan 09, 2011

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    8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity


    Old Guy's Avatar
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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Output is normally rated by wattage.



    All else equal there should be zero difference in sensitivity. Nada. the 16 ohm will need less current and more voltage. The 8 will need more current and less voltage.

    But at given watts, it still works out the same.

    IOW I don't understand why you are trying to rate the drivers by voltage? Voltage is not power. Voltage times current is.


    A given 8 ohm driver is going to draw more current from a solid state amp at a given voltage, therefore be louder, all else equal.

    I suggest a basic read of Ohm's Law

    Ohm's law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


    Now with your spec of a given voltage....lets just say 20 for grins,


    20/8 = 2.5 amps = 50 watts


    whereas

    20/16 = 1.25 amps = 25 watts.


    But to say the 8 ohm driver has a higher sensitivity is ridiculous. It is getting twice the power.


    OTOH on a tube amp the output tranny steps up the voltage. Current drops when you step up.


    But if you rate sensitivity in watts, a 110 dB/watt driver is that regardless. Bear in mind some ratings are at 4 feet, mostly old, and many newer are at one meter, the one meter rated driver has the advantage, the mic is closer to it.

    BTW Ohm's Law is also why solid state amps double up from 8 to 4 ohms, the power supply willing. An amp with a week supply might blow at the lower rating if the current exceeds its capacity. I've seen lots of 2 ohm loaded fried Pro Sound amps. Hundreds. Mebbe as many as a thousand....dunno, I was in Pro for 4 decades...
    Load em down, clip 'em out, Rawhide! Sorry I couldn't resist...


    In your case, are you running tube or SS? Passive or active?

    A 16 ohm driver on an 8 ohm passive will mess with your xover. But a 15-16 ohm NON-INDUCTIVE resistor across it will fix that, at a slight loss in gain, which the level control for that side should fix.

    If you are running active and a separate amp channel just play with the gains.

    I am amazed you want to stay with Symbiotik. I would use any excuse to get 299 frams.

    Some may question the need for the non-inductive in the resistor spec, IMHO they do what they want with their stuff, if I am recommending I try to suggest the CORRECT way. Often you can cheat, I cheat on my own stuff but not for sale, or as a recommendation.

    In the past my income depended on being right. I got called in to fix dozens of systems where the installer cheated.
    Your neighbors called. They like your music.

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    8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity


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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Your neighbors called. They like your music.

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    Inactive Member kevin@kab's Avatar
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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Hi,

    I think you missed my point.
    Here is the direct example:
    In a stereo system, one channel/driver has a 8 ohm phragm and the other channel/driver has a 16 ohm phragm
    A stereo amplifier with a common volume control drives these 2 speakers.
    Will they play at the same level?
    No; because less power is being developed in one vs the other.
    Why? because the amp is delivering the same voltage to both. This was my point.

    The question remains that for a given voltage how much difference in level would one expect to see? Thats all.
    Only 1/2 the power will be developed in one vs the other Power = E**2/R.
    But would that mean that one is 6db louder?
    I was trying to get a feel of that from anyone who may have had this experience.

    Kevin
    Jan 10, 2011

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    Senior Hostboard Member Steve Mac's Avatar
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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    4315A Impedance Curve?
    Maybe this"ll help?.... an impedance plot?
    Impedance plots for Altec drivers on particular horns...did I forget where this info is stored? I wish this info for all drivers was collected in an easy to search library here somewhere..

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    Senior Hostboard Member aditya's Avatar
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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Quote Originally Posted by kevin@kab View Post
    Hi,

    I think you missed my point.
    Here is the direct example:
    In a stereo system, one channel/driver has a 8 ohm phragm and the other channel/driver has a 16 ohm phragm
    A stereo amplifier with a common volume control drives these 2 speakers.
    Will they play at the same level?
    No; because less power is being developed in one vs the other.
    Why? because the amp is delivering the same voltage to both. This was my point.

    The question remains that for a given voltage how much difference in level would one expect to see? Thats all.
    Only 1/2 the power will be developed in one vs the other Power = E**2/R.
    But would that mean that one is 6db louder?
    I was trying to get a feel of that from anyone who may have had this experience.

    Kevin
    Jan 10, 2011
    Speaking electrically....there will be a power difference of 3db here, as the voltage is constant (assumed to be so). Had the voltage been half but ohms the same, then the difference would have been 6db.

    Acoustically speaking.....a difference will be there in the output. But it will rather affect the sound quality rather than the intensity. I mean the perception of bass will be slightly better for the 8 ohms unit, while the 16 ohms will sound a bit thin.

    It is because though there is an extra of 8 ohms in one driver, but still it is a part of the motor winding mechanism and not just an external peice of resistance, and hence it will give the motor more sensitivity (more turns per unit gap-area). But due to lack of current (and loudspeakers being current devices), the LF area, which needs a lot of it, will be affected, and thus the thin sound. For HF drivers it should not be so.

    Actually this topic in its detailed form is very complicated and vast as it enters into the domain of Loudspeaker engineering, and one can produce a 16 ohms driver having the same no of turns as an 8 ohms unit will have...

    Aditya

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    8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity


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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    Kevin...you didn't state a common amp in your first post, so I had to cover all bases.

    the volume difference is small...half power is 3 Db, NOT 6. 6 is 1/4 power.

    OTOH I don't think you read where I said 16 ohms on an 8 ohm crossover will cause a screwed up response. You should do the parallel resistor as stated.

    Really, you should get an 8 ohm fram.

    What you want to do can be done, as can a lot of things. It just isn't a good way.

    It isn't just the volume! The mismatch will mess with your crossover. I don't think you understand that part.
    Your neighbors called. They like your music.

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    Inactive Member techmecca's Avatar
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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    I read the Q&A and want to write out a response to see if I can explain this more clearly to myself, and to anyone else who wants to read me typing to myself...

    sensitivity, in this context, is stated as a sound pressure level, in dB_SPL, that is measured at a specific distance from a speaker/transducer, when a specific power level is applied to the device under test... sometimes the rest of the test conditions are described and specified but every manufacturer has differences in the details of how they set up measure and present their specs.

    so you have a pair loudspeakers/drivers, in this case 291-16A's

    what are those - I don't remember, some sort of compression driver...
    let's look it up ... ...

    oh yeah - these are sort of like 288's (I used to have a pair of those)

    291-16A

    Sensitivity is stated as 107dB SPL @ 1 watt input pink noise 500-3KHz bandwidth measured 4' from mouth of 30" horn (ref.: 0.0002 dyne/cm^2 for 1 Watt input)

    there is no 8 ohm version of 291...

    so we're not going to luck out and get direct data off a spec sheet

    so assume you have a power amplifier with a low output impedance so you can call it an AC voltage source... and that this amplifier is connected directly to the driver under test

    all else being equal except for the winding impedance of the voice coils, for a given applied voltage you will have twice as much power developed in the 8 ohm driver as you will in the 16 ohm driver

    expand on this...

    from

    ohms law... Volts = Amps x Ohms

    and power... Watts = Amps x Volts

    Watts = Volts^2 / Ohms


    note that none of this takes into account phase angle and other factors that happen when you are talking ac currents flowing through inductors and the various interactive springs and masses and couplings in the magnetic circuits and such ... speakers are not linear devices

    so with Watts = Volts^2 / Ohms you have an inverse linear relationship between load/speaker ohms and power when voltage is held constant... double the ohms and half the Watts

    okay...

    in dB terms - you calculate power dB as 10 x log of a ratio of the difference between one value and another... one of these values could be a reference like 1mW is for dBm or we could be talking about just relative power levels in our different voice coil drivers

    so with half the power that is a ratio of ?

    10 x log 0.5 = -3.010299956639812 dB

    and with twice power

    10 x log 2.0 = 3.010299956639812 dB

    (gotta love digital calculators - they don't know when to stop)

    so... 3dB difference in Watts developed in the two drivers

    and it turns out that, when everything is operating within design limits, sound pressure level measurement tracks with the power level such that a 3dB change in power in a driver will result in a corresponding 3dB change in measured dB_SPL

    so... answer is yes and the level difference is about 3dB less level from the 16 ohm driver

    that was the long way 'round

    but... this is a fairly specific situation and assumes two identical compression drivers - other than voice coil impedances - driven directly from a modern power amplifier with practically zero output impedance (voltage source)

    if you have a tube amp with a step-DOWN output transformer that has multiple impedance output taps you are in another realm... here we on the path to talking about power transfer, some stuff about tube output coupling through transformer, plate loading, power matching... if you have a stereo amplifier one driver to a channel you can put the 8 ohm driver on the 8 ohm tap and the 16 ohm driver on the 16 ohm tap and you'll be doing okay - that will work - BUT you can't put them both on two taps of one transformer because tap loading is interactive

    if you are feeding THROUGH a passive crossover then we are really getting in to reactive interactions that take us away from the simple ohms law figuring... and that makes everything above non-applicable because you are messing with filter response AND level... it's a network and there is really nothing you can do... no you can't put an 8 ohm resistor in series with the 8 ohm driver to make it work with a 16 ohm crossover... it will not match a 16 ohm driver



    IF you have a stereo power amplifier and you are directly driving one channel to the 16 ohm driver and the other channel to the 8 ohm driver ... so you are actively filtering and crossing over before the power amplifier ... and there are no voltage gain trims on the power amplifier or level trims on the output of the crossover you COULD put a pad on the input to the power amplifier channel feeding the 8 ohm driver...

    this would be a voltage divider so you need to knock the voltage feeding the 8 ohm driver by 3dB

    voltage dB's = 20 times the log of the ratio - somebody was thinking when they came up with this stuff because the the "20" multiplier takes into account the V^2 relationship to Watts

    so we want to work backwards from 3dB to figure out a voltage divider that will knock down the level BEFORE the input to the power amp

    3 / 20 = 0.15 and take the reverse of the log... so 10^0.15 = 1.412537544622754

    ooops! forgot this is a loss not a gain so it's really

    10^-0.15 = 0.707945784384138 ... yeah that's the number and it's the reciprocal of the gain... makes sense


    so if you normalize a voltage divider to 10K ohms

    you want to... this will look like crap unless you are using a monospace type

    signal->----\/\/\/\/\/--•------input to power amp
    |
    |
    \
    /
    \
    /
    \
    /
    |
    |
    common->----------------•-------common to power amp

    [oh yeah - this doesn't work... - okay it's a series resistor inline with source signal and following that a shunt resistor to signal common - assuming unbalanced bridging input to power amp]

    the series R would be close to 3K and shunt R would be close to 7K... or 2K9 and 7K1 - something like that... a trim pot and sound level meter might be better a solution

    anyway - with this pad on the input to the power amplifier channel feeding directly to the 8 ohm driver, the power developed in that driver will be knocked down to equal the power developed in 16 ohm driver on the other, unpadded, power amplifier channel, given same signal applied to both the padded and unpadded channels

    okay - getting close to the end here...

    Back to the 8 ohm resistor in series with 8 ohm driver to replace 16 ohm driver thing that I mentioned in passing above... that does not work because you are making a voltage divider, so the voltage at the driver goes in half and that results in a 6dB change in power in the driver... the crossover would see the 16 ohm load and be a little less unhappy (or not)

    BUT!

    IF you for some reason need to hang BOTH DRIVERS across the SAME AMPLIFIER OUTPUT... and the amplifier has no problem with this, and there is no passive crossover to deal with, and you really don't want to just spring for a new diaphragm or two so you can actually have matched-impedance drivers... IF all that is true... then I guess you could cheeze-ball it and put a 10 or 20 Watt 3.3 Ohm resistor (non-inductive) in series with the 8 ohm driver, which will knock the power in that driver, and the output SPL, by 3dB... it's not pretty and that driver will not be well-damped but... there you go

    how was that?
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  9. #9
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    8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity


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    Re: 8 ohm vs 16ohm sensitivity

    "there is no 8 ohm version of 291..."

    There actually are.

    Both factory, and ones that have had diaphragms changes


    The 16 is most common, but the 8 could be special ordered. After the switch to Ferrite motors they became much more common.

    16 ohm frams were a holdover from tubes, but many dealers preferred them, they were harder to blow up for the rock "n' rollers...

    Here's a link to a catalog page showing 291-8L which is a common later Ferrite mentioned...

    http://www.lansingheritage.org/image...pro/page12.jpg
    Your neighbors called. They like your music.

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