Everything you need to know about speaker impedance

Publicado 2018-02-22
The Audiophiliac discusses impedance with speaker designer Andrew Jones from ELAC.

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @spingarn
    This is excellent. Great that you can just summon Mr. Jones at will for his explanations.
  • @AmazonasBiotop
    Nice to have such professional speaker designer there. And hear strength from the source.. :) Take care!
  • @turiddu9
    OMG what a get!!!! Andrew Jones!!! An affable giant in high end audio! NICE interview Steve!
  • @razorsedge1
    Very informative! I own the Elac F5's-love them!Thanks Steve and Andrew!
  • @eaopanama
    Great interview Steve. Andrew Jones is a very respectable man in the industry with lots of knowledge. I enjoy listening to him and although I've been into car audio and video for a long time, I'm always learning new things from him. He seems like a real cool person.
  • @pauldemara7633
    That was an AWESOME interview Steve. Great questions and really fun answers from Andrew J. Hopefully many will watch to learn all about speaker impedance etc.
  • @jeffhunter4395
    Wow this was fantastic,please continue on this.I fully got what he's talking about.Since I'm in the market for some new bookshelf (sm/med) speakers.
  • @GoldenGateNum9
    Thanks a lot for this I was hanging on every word, we really need more people like this setting it straight on the disappear down a rabbit hole mythologising misinformative internet!.
  • @j-mo3129
    I liked the discussion. It helped me understand many of the factors associated with the impedence spec. It comes down to how much current the driver, receiver or amp, can produe before overheating its components. At 4 ohms a speaker will draw double the amps as a 8 ohm (minimum) speaker. The power supply in the amp must be able to produce enought power to support all channels. So those multi channel AV receivers have to have stout power supplies.
  • @jarodreddig63
    Great video. I knew impedance was frequency dependent but I learned so much more
  • @willmorgan365
    Great to hear Andrew once more. Just wish you never left Pioneer and TAD. Miss your demos at Hi Fi shows Mr Jones, you need to come back to Australia.
  • @MegaF1guy
    NAD states burst power into 8-4 and 2 ohms in their receiver specs if I am not mistaken. Great video!
  • @braintoosmall
    Thank you for a great explanation Andrew Jones! I've wondered about these specs for some time. Just make sure you have a good amplifier and you can drive any speaker!!
  • @dhpbear2
    8:30 - Solid state amps offer voltage control. A tube amp is basically a current source; those impedance humps will also show up as humps in the amplifier/speaker frequency response!
  • @SlowfingerJC
    For amplifiers, maximum power transfer is dictated by matching the amplifier output resistance with its load, i.e. maximum power transfer occurs when the load resistance = output resistance. All deviations from maximum power means not maximum power ie quieter = frequency response. Where a speakers resistance at a particular frequency is extremely high, then the amplified sound will be quieter = frequency response. If the resistance at a particular frequency gets near to 0 Ohm, then you are essentially shorting out the output of the amplifier, which means that the output stage of the amplifier could well exceed it's maximum power handling rating leading to a catastrophic failure. Just to make it a bit more complicated, the human ear has it's own frequency response, meaning that altough an amplifier may be amplifying a particular frequency relatively quietly, the human ear could be more sensitive at that frequency meaning that the sound would be percieved as not being quieter.
  • @mvv1408
    Thanks, this was very helpful. I now understand my 8 ohms Bowers and Wilkins speakers (minimum 4 ohms) should have actually been rated 5 ohms, that is, if they would follow convention.
  • @gutsanglory1
    Andrew Jones has so much speaker knowledge it just blurs my mind. Knows his shit !
  • @whitneybeehler
    Even though I only understand about 2% of what these guys are talking about, I could listen to them all day. Maybe then I'd understand 3%. I wish I had been an Electrical Engineer...