Ok, So if the speaker is set up for 8 ohms (seems to be the
consensus) what wattage can I hope to push through the speaker (not looking at
blowing the doors off, but don't want to over/underpower the system). Is
200 watts or more too much? How does wattage impact a tube-type
radio (what is too much)?
Does it matter if the speaker is dual-cone, coaxial,
etc?
Thanks. This is uncharted country for me.
Larry (Akron)
In a message dated 5/9/2017 2:04:03 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
mml-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
Date: Tue, 9
May 2017 12:59:25 -0500 From: Steve Lacker
<lackersg@xxxxxxxxx> To: Mopar Mailing List
<mml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: Radio
Speakers Message-ID:
<CAD4PAiGT0ZmGibkMeeXp9cGuoJ5zoaEr7hrBq+GQCTskyAaD=Q@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type:
text/plain; charset=UTF-8
At low power like stock radios, 4 or 8 ohms
won't usually make much of a difference. The radio can always push the most
power into the speaker its matched for- if its an 8-ohm radio and you hook
up a 4-ohm speaker, you won't get as much power into the speaker and so the
volume will be a little lower (and there'll be a little more heat in the
amp itself since it will be trying to push more current than its designed
for, but at 1-5 watts of output it doesn't matter much). By the same token,
if the output of the radio is 4 ohms and you hook up an 8-ohm speaker, the
volume will be lower also- in this case because the amp cannot generate
enough voltage swing to push full power into the 8 ohms. There's usually
not much risk to the amp in this case, until you get to 10s of watts where
the higher voltage could damage the output stages.
The one caveat
I'd point out is that if that '59 has a vacuum tube radio, all bets are
off. Vac tubes required a transformer on the output, and the speakers could
have a lot of different impedances depending on how the transformer was
wound.
On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 8:37 AM, cdcooke--- via MML
<mml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Basically the lower the ohm
value of the speaker, the higher watts the amp > can push to
it. > > IE if you have an 8 ohm speaker and the amp pushes 100
watts to it, if you > drop that to a 4 ohm speaker the amp can then push
200 watts to the > speaker. > > With a bone stock AM radio,
I would just go with what is commonly available > which should be a 4
ohm speaker today. Most everything is 4 ohms for auto > speakers anyway.
That factory AM radio won't push enough power to be of > much concern
anyway. > > On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 5:17 AM, ALIENVOICE--- via MML
<mml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > > I want (need)
to replace the dash speaker in my 59 Dodge (5x7), but need > >
to know what ohm the AM radio will support. Appears most
modern > speakers > > are much higher ohms than the older cars
and I'm not up-to-speed on how > > that > >
works. > > > > Ideas? > > > > Larry
(Akron) > > > >
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