
j_garcia
Audioholic Jedi
I'm with Mac on this one. Clipping has the potential to destroy speakers in seconds. More than enough power will simply allow you to turn it up to levels that nobody would ever listen at without distortion, up to the point at which the drivers or crossover fail. There's no question in my mind that this is what happened, because I've done it myself with my first stereo, and I've seen others do it many, many times it both home and car audio.MacManNM said:Dont think so. When a speaker is rated at 125W/RMS 500w/peak that means it will handle 125 W of music content.
He blew the speakers because he clipped the amp, period end of story.
Not true. I read an article on clipping that says that what happens is the amp's draw actually spikes up considerably, and even a low power amp can deliver far beyond it's rated power. However, when the amp reaches the point ot saturation where it can no longer deliver the required amount of current to keep the waveform correct, clipping will occur creating the distortion that you hear. That distortion results in the drivers heating up and quite possibly failing. It isn't a guarantee that it will happen in every case, but that IS how it happens. As Mule notes - if you feed a speaker with CLEAN signal, even in excess of the speaker's rating, it is not likely to have an issue. If you feed any speaker with a distorted signal for a length of time, it will eventually fail.(which the magnitudes required are not possible with a 90 watt amplifier)
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