A
adrhc
Junior Audioholic
Let's suppose I have a 50W (max continuous output power) 6ohms amp and 2 x 100W 6 ohms speakers; the audio source is some computer with an optical output.
What should one do to get his amp underpowered (not that I want that)?
My (faulty) reasoning is below.
Let's suppose the computer volume is set to 10% (aka very low); in this situation, I guess I can switch the volume (is it an audio-volume button or a power/energy button?) on the amp to maximum because the speakers will still play low, right? If I switch the computer volume to 100% then I guess the speakers will ask for more energy from the amp which will have not enough (50W < 100W) - hence it becomes underpowered.
If my reasoning above is bad then the thing I don't understand is how the speakers know they have to ask for more energy from the amp? How do they know how much loud they should play?
PS: I don't own an amp though I read a lot about them, enough to be more than able to setup and use it
PS: I don't want to underpower an amp, I only want to understand the process
What should one do to get his amp underpowered (not that I want that)?
My (faulty) reasoning is below.
Let's suppose the computer volume is set to 10% (aka very low); in this situation, I guess I can switch the volume (is it an audio-volume button or a power/energy button?) on the amp to maximum because the speakers will still play low, right? If I switch the computer volume to 100% then I guess the speakers will ask for more energy from the amp which will have not enough (50W < 100W) - hence it becomes underpowered.
If my reasoning above is bad then the thing I don't understand is how the speakers know they have to ask for more energy from the amp? How do they know how much loud they should play?
PS: I don't own an amp though I read a lot about them, enough to be more than able to setup and use it
PS: I don't want to underpower an amp, I only want to understand the process
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