Janglin_Jack
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2006
- Messages
- 106
- Reaction score
- 12
I love the 1024 speaker cab idea...or the other one with 5000 speakers!!! Call up Mythbusters....
In the guitar amp/speaker/cab world, I had a Studio .22 with a low efficiency speaker. I upped to a 100db efficient speaker and it moved in the right direction. Settled on an Eminence Wizard at 103db (rounding up slightly) and found this little 18w could then keep up with a live band/loud drummer. Normally I would have said 40w-50w minimum amp wattage for a rock band, (without stage mic) but upping the speaker efficiency proved to me that it works. On the flip side, having a 50w Marshall with a 4x12 was LOUD. Reducing the power using an attenuator I found -6db reduction really helped. So these numbers are meaningful and useful. Also, putting is a Post Phase Inverter Master Volume in a Marshall was another way of reducing power while retaining the tone/gain worked well with that style amp. I don't know if these things scale infinitely, but within 1x12 - 4x12 (number of speakers) and 20w - 50w - 100w amp power make real world differences. Less efficient speakers and an attenuator are great ways to do it, too. Dropping from a efficient 4x12 down to a less efficient speaker in an 1x12 might just be the ticket.
Mike
In the guitar amp/speaker/cab world, I had a Studio .22 with a low efficiency speaker. I upped to a 100db efficient speaker and it moved in the right direction. Settled on an Eminence Wizard at 103db (rounding up slightly) and found this little 18w could then keep up with a live band/loud drummer. Normally I would have said 40w-50w minimum amp wattage for a rock band, (without stage mic) but upping the speaker efficiency proved to me that it works. On the flip side, having a 50w Marshall with a 4x12 was LOUD. Reducing the power using an attenuator I found -6db reduction really helped. So these numbers are meaningful and useful. Also, putting is a Post Phase Inverter Master Volume in a Marshall was another way of reducing power while retaining the tone/gain worked well with that style amp. I don't know if these things scale infinitely, but within 1x12 - 4x12 (number of speakers) and 20w - 50w - 100w amp power make real world differences. Less efficient speakers and an attenuator are great ways to do it, too. Dropping from a efficient 4x12 down to a less efficient speaker in an 1x12 might just be the ticket.
Mike