So what do you plan to do with the current after you have a number? It is generally not useful to know.
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- 39 posts total
It really doesn't work that way. What is important is if the amp can drive the load with its rated power. If it can't obviously it will clip prematurely. The 'current' is surprisingly small. Let's say you have 4 Ohm Maggies and you're driving them with 200 Watts. The Power formula tells you the current: Power is 200 Watts Resistance is 4 Ohms. The current is thus about 7 Amps. Not that much really. So if 400 Watts then 10 Amps; still not that much. Current cannot exist without Voltage; together they are Watts. You might want to read this: The 'current' you read about so often with much larger numbers is actually something else! Read the article at the link.
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Simple. I'm thinking about getting a new amp for my Maggies. A number of people recommend a high-current amp for them. (Some say this is a myth.) The repeated line is: "it's not the watts; it's the current." So I'm curious how people determine which amps have high current. It's that simple. I don't need a number and I don't mean to suggest that it would determine which direction I go in. It just makes me curious how people know if an amp is high current or not. (Let me add that I'm not trying to open a debate about Maggies with tubes or Class D or anything like that.) I'll add as well that I'm a humanities professor, not an electrical engineer. I don't even understand what people mean by "power" out here (In cultural studies, we use that term in a Foucauldian sense.) Sometimes that word seems to mean watts, sometimes current, or voltage, or .... I once set up a model train for my son. It took enormous focus for me to work through these terms, and unfortunately what little I learned is gone.
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Thanks to everyone! And @atmasphere , I wrote my response before seeing that you had posted your very helpful response. I think I'm getting it! |
- 39 posts total