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On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 20:50:49 -0400, Ken Scharf
wrote: Hmm, I actually thought the power output was 1/2 of what I had calculated, so I'm a little confused. I measured the 24v p-p using an oscilloscope (one of those new fangled ones that actually let you set cursor lines on the screen to bracket the waveform and it then shows the voltage measurement on the screen, in this case 24v pp). I used an 8 ohm non-inductive 50w resistor as a load (actually two of them, one per channel). Now if I take 24 volts and reduce it by .707 I get 16.96, and if I square that 287.9, and divide that by 8 (e**2)/r the result is 36. OK, I'm still missing something. Maybe .707 * 12v (why HALF the pp voltage?), yeah that gives just about 9 watts out. Half pp because that gives you "peak power" which is a defined term and not up for redefinition. Your P-P RMS power out into 8 ohms is about 18W (but I've no calculator handy and my mental arithmetic these days is very, very rusty. -- "What is now proved was once only imagin'd." - William Blake, 1793. |
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