I am sorry but your wrong because the voltage that is produced is from your amp and if you turn the amped fully you could possibly blow the speaker so your test is not valid. The higher the volume the more voltage from your amp is the higher the volume the more voltage it will produce so your voltage is not a constant voltage. This has nothing to do with the wattage of your speaker. The rating of your amp determines the output voltage/ current of your amp If you understand what I'm saying your test is not valid
Not to mention a speaker is not a resistive load. Impedance to ac cannot be measured with an ohm meter. That speaker is most likely considered 8 ohm. Not 6.
Hello sir i have audiocontrol lc 6 1200 provide 125 watts RMS and focal 80 watts RMS 4-ohm impedance what voltages i should keep my amp gain please help
Sir, What Happens If We Give More Power Output? Does The Voltage Wil Raised Up More? Then, How We Want To Know If The Speaker Is On Highest Power? Because We Still Can Give Out More And More Power Until The Speaker Blown Up... Is There Any Ways We Can Make Sure That Speaker Already On Max Power?
You know how to use tester bruh? Ofc he will set the tester ohms to the lowest because it's the lowest that the tester can measure. You set the tester to 200 ohms and it will measure 200 ohms - 1 ohms. Simple as that.