
MACCA350
Audioholic Chief
Ampdog, this answer has me perplexed. The input voltage may be constant but it does take more amp power(current draw) to reproduce 10Hz at 100db then it does 10KHz at 100db. I can't for the life of me see how the answer could be no.Ampdog said:No, no 5, this is a basic physics thing. The same power, the same output "volume" (disregarding imperfections). The fact is that for that "same volume", i.e sound intensity, there is a velocity relationship between cone and output (again talking in principle only, disregading particular cabinet designs etc.). You would have noticed that one cannot see or even feel the cone movement in a tweeter. The lower the frequency, thus the slower the cone movement, the further it has to move to create the same pressure wave. You do not do anything from the outside to create this; it goes naturally. That is to say, if you use a signal generator as input source (it normally has a constant voltage output) and you turn down the frequency, you will feel and later notice that the driver cone has an increasingly longer amplitude. I just mentioned this to indicate that it will be at the lowest frequency that a woofer cone could run up against its stops.
cheers
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