Agreed.
Did you read my post#20, when I sort of anticipated a major misconception that non electrical people may think that electron flow in a wire with the filter and speaker driver connected in series would behave like water flows in a pipe with a filter at the consumer end.
Electric current flow does NOT work like that, you can put the filter physically anywhere along the line/wire, if the filter offers very high impedance to, say frequency below 500 Hz, the amplifier will send little signal current below 500 Hz, period, as soon as steady state condition is reached (very quickly for short lines in audio applications).
As an numerical example for "a partially used/unused" case, consider the calculation below:
Signal voltage at amp output = 10 V
Signal frequency band at amp input = Full band
Impedance of the filter at 1000 Hz = 5000 Ohms
Current flow from amp to speaker binding post = V/Z (Ohm's law),or 10 V/5000 Ohms = 2 mA
You can do this for every single frequency of the signal the same way if you have the needed data of the filter.
Thanks PENG!
I suspect your post #20 would make everything clear to me if I properly understood the relevance of current vs voltage!
I think the relevant point (which I am inferring from your posts, but would like to get confirmed) is that if the current is very low, the amp has not seen a significant load.
Let me outline a scenario to make sure I'm on the same page:
Say you have a 100Watt AVR. You also have speakers that have an especially demanding load at 140Hz (inefficient speakers with an impedance drop to 2 Ohms and the Phase is difficult). If you crank it, this load exceeds the ability of the AVR and you get audible distortion, which I presume would show up across many frequencies.
As I understand it, if I were to bi-amp this speaker the amp driving the woofer would see this same load and we would have distortion from that amp. However, the amp driving the mid-range and tweeter would not see this distortion and we would have a "clean" signal for the critical mid-range frequencies.
My question is "is the above a fair assessment of how it would work?" IOW, although both amps are seeing the full range signal, only one is being subjected to the difficult load at 140Hz, correct?
Note that in this scenario, Bi-amping would realize an audible improvement
, but you still have an overloaded amp with distortion. Thus, bi-amping "sucks less", but is definitely not a solution!
The appropriate solution would be to use an amp that is capable of dealing with the 140Hz, 2 Ohm load the speaker presents.
Perhaps the most succinct way to put my question is:
Does the filter in an XO
1) reduce the load on the amp (in a bi-amped configuration),or
2) does the amp still do the same amount of work and the filter absorbs the power (like a resistor would - converting the power into heat).
To explain my comment about upstream and downstream - as a mechanical engineer, I want to look at a circuit as having a sequential path - the way you would interpret a Rube Goldberg device! Each sequential action is defined independently of what is next, only dependent on what came before it!
So, my tendency is to look at an electrical circuit as a sequential system, when in actuality, there needs to be awareness of what is downstream in order to properly know what happens upstream.
By using the terms and concepts I think in (not being from an electrical perspective),I am hoping assist others with the same difficulties I have to understand/appreciate these differences between electrical and mechanical systems.