See this link for details of the speaker:I'm uncertain as what the difficulty is. A speaker is an inductor. A signal is a a waveform of a certain voltage and current level. Low impedance means high-current (which is expected to control the inductor). The speaker has limits it needs to be kept within (aka, the inductor's behavior needs conttrolled to stay within a window)
People need to stop looking at this as a speaker, and thinking of it as an inductor. You control the signal to keep it within parameters when it begins to exceed them (like an opamp providing negative feedback on the signal when it starts moving beyond an acceptable range. You limit the current to the inductor when it begins to exceed a certain range (filters, capacitive & inductive).
What would be useful is any actual information off the speaker itself so it can be identified, and perhaps a datasheet sourced.
Not sure this will work as you may increase the wattage but decrease the Impedance, so your 8Ohm may not work.
What are you talking about ???????????????
I agree the wrong amplifier for these speakers but the customer doesnt want to change the amp. So stuck now and have to deal with the speakers and protect them as much as possible.The truthful 40W rating for continuous pink noise (similar to music) is with a 70Hz highpass filter to prevent the speaker from hammering against the magnet since the enclosure is ported.
The speaker system resonates at about 75Hz then two in series will cause the resonance to be uncontrolled and sound boomy, and be even more damaging.
250W into 8 ohms is 44.8V RMS and the rated 40W into 4 ohms is 12.7V RMS. The wrong amplifier for the speaker.
Yes did several tests, but the simplest of them all is use a multimeter and measured connectivity and resistance. Connectivity is open, and resistance is infinite... so speakers burnt...Did you determine for sure if the destroyed speakers were burned up or mechanically damaged from "over-travel?" A fuse can be fair protection against the former, but poor against the latter.
According to the linked datasheet, the speakers are 8 ohms each, not 4. For 80 W into 16 ohms the current would be 2.24 A, so if you follow crutschow's advise, a fuse of probably 1.5 A for nominally 36 watts would be a good starting point.
Is there any opportunity to attenuate the input signal to the power amplifier? I've seen some amps where there is an output from the preamp and source selector and an input to the power amp to allow additional processing equipment (e.g. an "equalizer") to be conveniently inserted. If that is the case, then an attenuator and high-pass filter could be added. It isn't foolproof, but might be worth considering.
Why can't you attenuate the input signal?Unfortunately cannot attenuate the input singal.
Nope this is a real Bose, I double checked. But the PTC didnt do its job.The Bose speaker already has a PTC resistor on it for overload protection.
Is it a cheap Chinese knock-off missing the PTC resistor and missing the transformer and not a real Bose speaker?
Well, that may be because you're thinking of a different speaker than I. Any speaker with a coil attached to a paper cone, where the magnetic core is inserted into the coil (paper-sleeve bearing may exist from the cone), is by definition an inductor.Great.
But that wasn't totally apparent when you described them as an inductor.![]()
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