I don't worry about the math, I just feed a sine wave within the passband to the amp, hook up my multi-meter to the amp's output and set the limiter to 60 Volts.guitarkeys.com wrote:JCbowman,
You stated that the 3015lf T48 can be limited at 60v. I just want to check my math to make sure I am setting up my limiting correctly.
That would be limiting (1) at 360watts: 10 Ohm x 360 watts = 3600 > sqrt = 60 v
To limit (2) in parallel at max would be: 5 Ohm x 900 watts = 4500 > sqrt = 67 v
To limit (2) in parallel at 400 watts would be: 5 Ohm x 800 watts = 4000 > sqrt = 64 v
Didn't know you were going to have a math test today! But seriously, I just want to protect my investment. I limit at 400 using a 80 hz sine wave. If I did my match right and you have reasons for limiting at 360 watts, please share so that I don't blow anything up. Don't know if it makes a difference, but my system is used for live music.
Jamie
The 60 Volt figure is not based on the RMS wattage rating of the driver - it is based on the maximum displacement of the driver within the speaker cabinet. It's a calculation that Bill came up with to prevent driver over-excursion.
The nice thing about basing your limiting off the measured voltage is that you can add as many cabinets as your amplifier can handle in parallel and the voltage will not change.