Guest
If one has a 4-ohm speaker and a car battery that puts out 12.6V, an
amplifier can produce:
P = V^2/R = (12.6V)^2 / 4 = 39.7 W.
If one uses two amplifiers in a bridged configuration, that power then
becomes:
P = V^2/R = (12.6+12.6)^2 / 4 = 159 W.
Per speaker.
My question then becomes: how come car stereos don't include bridged
amplifiers as a standard? 159W per channel, x 4 channels, becomes
636W - more than enough for everybody - no need to buy a separate
amplifier. The most I've seen on typical stereos is 50W per channel -
and I'm guessing they're really stretching that 50W.
Thanks,
Michael
amplifier can produce:
P = V^2/R = (12.6V)^2 / 4 = 39.7 W.
If one uses two amplifiers in a bridged configuration, that power then
becomes:
P = V^2/R = (12.6+12.6)^2 / 4 = 159 W.
Per speaker.
My question then becomes: how come car stereos don't include bridged
amplifiers as a standard? 159W per channel, x 4 channels, becomes
636W - more than enough for everybody - no need to buy a separate
amplifier. The most I've seen on typical stereos is 50W per channel -
and I'm guessing they're really stretching that 50W.
Thanks,
Michael