Fun stuff indeed! It's interesting that moderate temperature changes would be that significant. It's also interesting that, "the active noise reduction will really only be effective in the low frequencies (
which works out ok, because it's the lows that don't get sealed out well by the earcup and ear cushion)."
GARTHWILSON wrote:
In car stereos, they've gone for 4Ω and apparently even 2Ω speakers, plus bridged outputs, because the power supply voltage is so limited.
Yeah, those are two approaches that've been used: lower-impedance loudspeakers, and/or two amplifiers per loudspeaker.
Another approach I've seen doesn't use the car's 12 Volts directly. Instead, the power amplifier chassis also incorporates an inverter -- a switch-mode power oscillator and a toroidal step-up transformer, followed by rectifiers and filter cap's. Of course this arrangement can supply DC to the power amp's at pretty well any voltage you choose; you're no longer stuck with 12 volts.
I don't do a lot of mucking about with this sort of gear, so I'm not sure how widely adopted this approach is. But I've heard some
ridiculously loud car stereos, and I expect that, at such high power levels, the inverter approach becomes the only reasonable option.
Cheers,
Jeff
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