so if i have the master volume at 10 but the preamp only at 3,diagrammatiks wrote:tube amps put out more power when overdriven.
all wattage ratings are always measured at clean power.
am i crossing the line?
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
so if i have the master volume at 10 but the preamp only at 3,diagrammatiks wrote:tube amps put out more power when overdriven.
all wattage ratings are always measured at clean power.
Hi,pompira wrote:excellent! i mean, it's bad that they lie, but a little less power never hurt a speaker.Firestorm wrote: No marketing department ever understated the output power of anything.
i hear you.Firestorm wrote: No marketing department ever understated the output power of anything. As a hypothetical, you can sue anyone for any cause. Whether you prevail is a different matter entirely.
thanks again
i'm not sure i feel so joyful about hearing that.diagrammatiks wrote: [...] If your master is on ten and you turn the preamp up until you hear distortion you are most likely pushing past whatever stated wattage the amp is.
isn't B+ the same as plate voltage?Firestorm wrote: [...] There are a lot of different "100W" Marshalls; with hot pickups, some of them can likely do 180W heavily distorted (most published ratings are power before clipping, tho). Other Marshalls run a much lower B+ and likely can't get close to 180W. [...]
i know your post was addressed to firestorm, but i recommend earplugs (they're cheap)Jana wrote:But, after 50 watts or so, it doesn't matter--deaf is deaf!
i see. it's not just black and white when talking about output power, is it?Jana wrote: [...] What I posted does not contradict what Firestorm wrote. [...]
hell, removing the back from my cabinet influences loudness,renshen1957 wrote: [...] However as far as I have experienced, speaker efficiency influences loudness [...]
This is technically true, but at levels measured in milliwatts. And only the power amp is affected; changing supply voltage to preamp stages doesn't affect gain, (except maybe an eensy-weensy bit).pompira wrote:so a marshall meant to see 115V mains
connected to 120V mains will output more power
than a marshall meant to see 230V mains
connected to 220V mains? (the latter is actually my situation)
What did you blow up?pompira wrote:excellent! i mean, it's bad that they lie, but a little less power never hurt a speaker.Firestorm wrote: No marketing department ever understated the output power of anything.
i hear you.Firestorm wrote: No marketing department ever understated the output power of anything. As a hypothetical, you can sue anyone for any cause. Whether you prevail is a different matter entirely.
thanks again
nothing, gladly.Reeltarded wrote: What did you blow up?
why? what are you afraid of blowing? Just make sure there's a little wiggle room in your speaker cabs.pompira wrote:i'm not sure i feel so joyful about hearing that.diagrammatiks wrote: [...] If your master is on ten and you turn the preamp up until you hear distortion you are most likely pushing past whatever stated wattage the amp is.
well, i wasn't afraid of blowing anything until certain facts came to light.diagrammatiks wrote: why? what are you afraid of blowing? Just make sure there's a little wiggle room in your speaker cabs.
There's a reason the historic Marshall is a 100watt amp with 2 quads of greenbacks. The first speakers were rated at 25 watts and a single 412 would blow.
The side benefit of that is that doubling the output power of the amp only results in 3dB of increased "loudness," which is perceptible, but only just so. Doubling the surface area of the speakers gets you another 3dB increase (in SPL) on top of that, so you don't have to actually see people's ears bleeding to know you're too loud.diagrammatiks wrote:There's a reason the historic Marshall is a 100watt amp with 2 quads of greenbacks. The first speakers were rated at 25 watts and a single 412 would blow.