Efficiency measures how much input power is turned into motion and/or output on a single driver and how much of the input power is wasted in heat. Most individual drivers are only about .25% to .35% efficient. Meaning 99.75%-99.65% of a given watt is wasted in heat.
Sensitivity measures how well the individual drivers coupled with the enclosure translate a given input signal into acoustical output.
I just thought I would put that out there for everyone so as to avoid confusion.
When one considers how much power is really in a single watt, one realizes how much energy is being wasted.
Here something that may put it into perspective.
760 watts = 1 horsepower
Say a person's sub handles 800 watts of power continuous. Using an efficiency number of .35% from above, of that signal, only 2.8 watts of power are being converted into acousical energy or motion. The other 797.20 watts are being wasted in heat and or being absorbed by the suspension and other losses. This is why you see big monster drivers and cooling systems. They have to deal with the heat.
If we could somehow improve the actual efficieny of individual drivers to say 20%, we could power our systems with as little as 10 watts of power AND reach very high spl's.
The 800 watt sub really would only need 2.8 watts of power to reach mind numbing spl levels if we could get efficiency of 100%. We would then not have to waste 1+ full horsepower in heat!
Putting all this in perspective, it is amazing how loud some of the systems out there can get with just one watt of input power (when thinking how much of the watt is being wasted in heat on each of the drivers) when coupled with an enclosure. Sensitivity is, in a way, a measurement of the efficiency of the driver & enclosure's (or system's) ability to turn input power into acoustical output.
Do not confuse individual driver sensitivity with a speaker system's (speaker enclosure, crossover, etc.) sensitivity however as they are fairly different.
I hope this makes some sense or is fairly relevant.
