Well I guess all the amp makers out there have it all wrong and are mis leading there customers telling them there is a different Wattage output depending on what Ohm load they are playing through.
No argument about
that statement, but....
Transistor amps vary output by impedance,
tube amps (such as the SVT being discussed in this thread) do not. However, even solid state amps don't have "ohms", i.e.;
What ohm is your Ampeg head?
Again, ohms are a measure of resistance/impedance and do not correlate to an amplifiers output other than the effect the load (which is rated in “ohms”) has on the output potential. A solid state amp can be rated for X watts at a specific load, a
load measured in
ohms, but an
amp is not rated as being any specific “ohms”. Tube amps output (pretty much) the same watts at any impedance, but you need to match the load impedance with the output stage impedance using a transformer. That’s why most tube amps have switchable transformer taps, as in the selector on an SVT for either a 2 or 4 ohm speaker load.
I am not an electrician, just been playing bass for 50 or so years
Man, you are OLD.
I have found that Ohms or load problems can fry your head and wattage can dust your speakers.
Anyone who has messed around with amps long enough know that smell, some of us delve into
why these thing blow up.
The boy said he had a 300 watt head, I ran 600 watts in the 70's and 80's daily and blew out 2x15 radio shack, eminence, Utah, and probably a few more brands I cant remember.
Even cheap speakers will take an incredible amount of clean sine wave; it’s when your power amp starts clipping that the fireworks begin. Clipped tube amps are much friendlier to speakers than clipped transistor amps, tube distortion could be described as “warm”, and transistor distortion is much harsher.
Then I got 2 JBL D140F 8 ohm 15 inch speakers rated I think at 150w RMS 400 peak each. Guess what, still got them and never blew another speaker.
I'm a HUGE fan of D140F's for bass, and have used them since they were available
new. However, they are
not capable of handling power on the scale of modern drivers;
way less than 600 watts can blow the cones off of a pair of D140F’s.
What kind of amp(s) were you using?
You either were not pushing your amp(s), or maybe they were solid state and the JBL’s were configured to show a 16 ohm load. If your amp(s) (I don’t remember any mono 600 watt MI amps in the olden days) outputted 600 watts into a 4 ohm load, at 16 ohms you could be making as little as 150-175 watts, well within the tolerance for a pair of D140F’s.
I guess experience does not have a chance with all the knowledge on this site. No balls no glory!
Just hang in there, I for one believe that an old dog can indeed learn new tricks. This forum is
mostly pretty friendly
.