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Understanding Specifications – Car Audio Amplifier Efficiency

Amplifier Efficiency

Next, on our look through the common specifications included with modern car audio amplifiers, we want to take a look at amplifier efficiency. With the electrical systems in modern cars shrinking in capacity with every passing year, getting power from your amplifier without taxing the wiring, battery, and alternator in your car is a genuine challenge and concern. Modern Class-D amplifiers have quickly become the standard to drive our speakers. Read on to find out why.

What Is an Amplifier Efficiency Specification?

The efficiency specification of the amp you have chosen will let you know how much of the electricity fed into your amp is converted to an audio signal and how much is wasted as heat. A typical specification would look like 75.1 percent at full power into a 4-ohm load. This information tells us that 75.1 percent of the power going into the amp is converted to audio and that 24.9 percent is used to process the audio signal and is converted to heat.

While comparing maximum power ratings is fun, the music we listen to is quite dynamic and its levels vary a great deal. We set up a pair of amplifiers in our lab and took a series of measurements to graph the efficiency of the amp relative to its power output capabilities.

Efficiency Graph
Orange – Class-D Amplifier Blue – Class-AB Amplifier

As you can see, the Class-D amplifier is, more often than not, at least twice as efficient as this particular (very low quality) Class-AB amp. Many reviewers list amplifier efficiency at two levels: full power and 1/3 of rated power. The two amps in this test delivered 23 percent and almost 71 percent efficiency at their 1/3 of maximum power rating. Indeed, you are reading that correctly. The Class-D amp would draw less than 33 percent of the current required to produce the same amount of power as the Class-AB amp. Since we operate our amplifiers in this range most of the time, even with the music quite loud, the effect on the vehicle’s electrical system can be dramatic.

The Class D amplifier is cool as a cucumber.
Amplifier Efficiency
I literally can’t touch the heatsink on this Class AB amplifier.

Where Does the Heat Go?

As mentioned, the energy that enters an amp that is not sent to the speakers is converted to heat. To illustrate this effect, we fired up these same two amplifiers and let them run at an output level of about 21 watts for 10 minutes. The thermal images below give you an idea of how they differ.

Where Efficiency Really Matters

In a motorcycle, UTV or side-by-side where the current production capabilities of the factory electrical system are quite limited, choosing an amp with excellent efficiency is significantly more important than, say, in a pickup truck that is equipped with a 180-amp alternator. For these applications, look for an amp that offers the highest efficiency number you can find. Several motorcycle-specific amplifier solutions exceed 90 percent efficiency at full power.

Idle Current Specification

Another specification you will see listed in reviews and some owner’s manuals is idle current. Idle current describes how much current the amplifier draws when it’s turned on but not playing any music. A relatively high or low number doesn’t necessarily mean the amplifier is worth avoiding or is better than another solution. For example, amplifiers with onboard microcontrollers or signal processors consume a little more current than an amp without these devices and subsequent features.

If you drive a vehicle with an adequate electrical system, then considering amplifier efficiency isn’t a huge concern. If you drive a compact to mid-sized car, a hybrid or any kind of type of powersports vehicle, keep an eye on those efficiency ratings. Your local mobile electronics retailer can help you choose a solution that will sound great.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Understanding Specifications – Car Audio Amplifier Frequency Response

Amplifier Frequency ResponseAs the next topic in our series explaining amplifier specifications, we will look at the frequency response information that manufacturers provide and explain how to interpret this information. In the simplest of statements, the frequency response spec will tell you about the low- and high-frequency limits of the amplifier based on its design. As with all the specs we have looked at, the information provided is as telling as the information that may be missing from the spec page. Let’s dive in and have a look.

Understanding Amplifier Frequency Response Specifications

Let’s take a look at a good amplifier with a specification of 4 Hz to 50 kHz. In this particular example, there is no tolerance provided, so we don’t know if those low- and high-frequency limits represent a 1dB or 3dB tolerance. Let’s fire up the amp and see what we can find out.

Connected to our digital interface and bank of load resistors, the amp shows a -1 dB frequency response of 8.21 Hz on the bottom end and 48.7 kHz on the top. Allowing for a tolerance of 3 dB, the measurement is 4.36 Hz on the bottom and above the 96 kHz measurement limit of my equipment on the top.

In short, this information tells us that this amp won’t dramatically affect the response of your audio system anywhere in the audible spectrum, and well beyond.

Amplifier Frequency Response
Frequency response of our reference amplifier when connected to a resistive 4-ohm load. Note: Ignore the spike at 95.3 kHz and the waviness below 10 Hz – those are caused by limits in the calibration of the measurement equipment.

Speakers Are Not Resistors

Several factors govern the frequency response of an amplifier. Outside of a discussion of the circuit design and components used for the amp, what most people realize is that the speaker system you connect your amp to can affect its performance. In the lab, we use resistive loads. In the real world, speakers add a level of inductive reactance that opposes AC current flow and affects frequency response. When you add a passive crossover network, the load now includes capacitive reactance. Ultimately, even in a simple two-way passive crossover network, the load the amp sees varies a great deal depending on frequency.

I contacted John Atkinson, editor at Stereophile magazine, and asked permission to recreate his reactive speaker simulation network. His use of a reactive load for amplifier response testing was the result of an Audio Engineering Society paper by Eric Benjamin titled, “Audio Power Amplifiers for Loudspeaker Loads.” Atkinson consulted with Ken Kantor of NHT and International Jensen on the passive network, and the result was a version of the network you see below.

The purpose of this network is to present different impedances to the amplifier at different frequencies to evaluate its performance. The network replicates what an amplifier would see when powering a two-way, sealed-enclosure bookshelf speaker with a nominal impedance of 8 ohms. I created this network with the help of Frank Fabian at The Speaker Shop in Toronto. His store has an impressive supply of capacitors, resistors and inductors in stock. If you have a home speaker that needs repair or reconing, he’s the man to talk to!

Amplifier Frequency Response
As can be seen from the orange trace, the network starts with an impedance of just under 9 ohms at 10 Hz, then peaks at over 16 ohms at 70 Hz, and again at just under 12 ohms at 1 kHz. It drops 5.5 ohms at 3.4 kHz before another resonance at 7.5 kHz of 8.4 ohms. The blue trace indicates the phase of the load and shows that this is both somewhat capacitive (positive phase shift) and quite inductive (negative phase shift).

Amplifier Response into Reactive Loads

The next step was to repeat the frequency response measurement of our reference amp using a 4-ohm load, a 2-ohm load and our reactive load to demonstrate just how much effect there is on the response.

Amplifier Frequency Response
The blue line represents the 4-ohm load, the green is the 2-ohm load and the red is our reactive network.

As you can see, there is a small change in high-frequency response from this amp depending on the impedance of the load. The amp includes some filter chokes on the outputs as part of its variable voltage power supply design. The difference between the 4-ohm and the reactive trace is 0.85 dB at 20 kHz.

What About Inexpensive Amplifiers?

Our reference amp is just that – a high-quality amp that sounds amazing. So, what happens when you perform these same tests on an inexpensive amp? Let’s look and see!

Amplifier Frequency Response

Our cheap amp does a fair job with the resistive loads, rolling off by 1dB around 16kHz on the top and below 10 Hz on the bottom. The red trace shows that there is some emphasis between 2 and 3 kHz caused by the inductive characteristics of the passive filter network. Would that emphasis be audible? That would depend on your level of obsession. You can hear the difference of a few tenths of a dB when adjusting an EQ.

How About Our Class-D Amplifier Friends?

As we mentioned, the small filters on the output of our good amp resulted in a measurable change in frequency response between the varying loads. What happens when we measure a Class-D amplifier that uses large filters on the outputs?

Amplifier Frequency Response

Here we can see that there is a half-dB bump around 3 kHz and more than 2 dB of additional output at 20 kHz as compared to the 1 kHz reference level. Compared to a purely resistive load, the bump at 20 kHz is 3.5 dB more than a 4-ohm resistive load and about 7 dB louder than 2 ohms. If you’ve ever wondered why Class-D amplifiers sound different than a high-quality Class-AB, this is one of the reasons.

Working with Frequency Response Specifications

Amplifier Frequency ResponseFor most applications, you can ignore the frequency response measurements of the amplifiers you choose. The majority will be adequately flat from 20 Hz to 20 kHz. If you plan on driving a low-impedance load (low-impedance drivers or many drivers wired in parallel), the added impedance will dramatically reduce the high-frequency performance of a Class-D amp.

If you are planning on building an audio system that is truly high-resolution audio-ready, and capable of playing audio signals beyond 20 kHz, you are going to need to do some homework. Odds are, you’ll want a Class-AB amp for the tweeters, at the very least.

Finally, designing an audio system that uses active filtering will help reduce the variations in impedance caused by passive crossovers.

If you need help choosing an amplifier for your car audio system, drop into your local specialist mobile electronics retailer and talk to one of their product specialists.

Please check out other articles in our series on Understanding Specifications.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Understanding Specifications – Car Audio Amplifier Input Sensitivity

Input SensitivityThe next topic in our look at car audio amplifier specifications is input sensitivity. This specification is easy to understand but is important to choose an amp that will work with the system your local car stereo shop has designed. In the simplest of terms, the sensitivity specification determines how much voltage is required on the input of the amplifier for it to produce full power. Let’s look at it in more detail.

Understanding Amplifier Input Sensitivity Range

Using our high-quality two-channel amp, our measurement equipment can show us just how much, or little, signal is required to produce a specific signal from the amp. We are going to use an output level of 10 watts for this example to keep our bank of load resistors cool and power supply happy.

Input Sensitivity

With the sensitivity controls set to their lowest level, our amplifier produces 10 watts of output (6.32 Vrms) from about 1.4 V of input signal. This ratio equates to a system gain of 12.34 dB.

Input Sensitivity

With the sensitivity controls on the amplifier turned to their highest setting, the amp amplifier is capable of producing 10 watts of output (6.32 Vrms) from a mere 54 millivolts rms of signal. This ratio equates to a gain of 41.41 dB.

Why Does Amplifier Sensitivity Matter?

Input SensitivityBeing able to get full power from your amplifier from a variety of signal sources is important to ensuring that your installer can make that amp work with any source. If you have a high-quality aftermarket source unit, the preamp outputs should provide 2 or 4 Vrms of signal with the volume at maximum and a recording at 0 dB.

If you are trying to power an audio system from something like an iPod, you may find that the signal from the headphone jack peaks around 1 Vrms. I tested one of my iPod Nanos at 1.03 Vrms. This lower maximum level means you need more gain from your amplifier.

At the other end of the scale, you may want your installer to connect your amplifier to the speaker outputs of your factory radio or factory-installed amplifier. The voltage from these sources may be as much as 8 V from a radio and could be as high as 40 V from a high-powered factory subwoofer amp. In those cases, you need to choose an amp that has dedicated speaker-level inputs or implement some sort of level converter to reduce the signal to something that the amp can accept.

System Tuning with Input Sensitivity Controls

Input SensitivityWhen it comes to having a fully active audio system installed in your vehicle, unless you choose to implement a stand-alone digital signal processor (DSP), you will want to choose an amp with a lot of adjustability so that your installer can use the sensitivity control to reduce the output of the amp for the tweeters and midrange speakers, relative to the subwoofers and mid-bass drivers. You may find it useful to choose an amp for your tweeters that doesn’t produce a lot of power. Less maximum power output capability will reduce the amount of gain designed into the amp and result in a system that is easy to balance.

We would strongly recommend using a DSP since it enables you to configure crossover and output level adjustments quickly, but we understand that every audio system upgrade has budget limits. You can always upgrade later.

A Comment on Background Noise

Input SensitivityIf you have understood this article fully, then you realize that more signal from your source unit doesn’t necessarily represent an ability for your amplifier to produce more power, assuming the input sensitivity control is adjusted properly.

Years ago, when aftermarket source units with high-voltage preamp outputs were introduced, some companies marketed them as allowing stereo systems to play louder. If you didn’t adjust the sensitivity controls on your amp, this was a true statement.

The real benefit of a strong preamp signal is that you can turn down the gains on your amp and subsequently reduce the background noise in your system. Look at the difference in background noise of our high-end audio amp with the gain set at minimum and at maximum. Not all amps perform this well. As long as you can get full power from your amp, less gain means less background noise.

Choose an Amp That Works with Your Car Audio System

In most cases, the name-brand amplifiers available on the market today have the input voltage flexibility required to work in almost any application. Your local mobile enhancement retailer would be happy to work with you to pick a solution that will maximize the performance of your system.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Understanding Specifications – Car Audio Amplifier Signal-to-Noise Ratio

Amplifier Power RatingsWelcome to our new series about understanding product specifications. Our goal in these articles is to help you understand what the amplifier power ratings mean when you start to compare solutions. We’ll not only explain which numbers are good, but we’ll include a detailed description of what each specification means, how it’s measured and how it affects what you hear or experience. To start the series, let’s look at amplifiers. It’s a subject we’ve chosen because people tend to focus on amplifier specifications more than anything else when shopping.

Why Your Car Audio System Needs Power

Amplifier Power RatingsWithout a doubt, the most popular specification that consumers look at when purchasing a car audio amplifier is its power rating. An amplifier takes the small signal from your source unit and increases it in voltage and current to drive a low-impedance speaker. In a nutshell, the more power you have, the more loudly you can play your car stereo system before the signal going to the speakers distorts. The limit of how much power is required is determined by the power handling specifications of the speakers in the vehicle, their cone excursion limits and their distortion characteristics. We’ll look at those limits in a future article about speaker specifications.

How We Measure Power

When an amplifier is set up in a lab to measure power, it’s typically connected to a power supply and a set of load resistors. Many manufacturers use test equipment from companies like Audio Precision to measure the distortion characteristics of the output signal to determine the point at which you would hear the distortion.

Amplifier Power Ratings
The graph above shows the distortion of two channels of a five-channel amp relative to their power level. The blue trace is one of the four main channels and produces about 95 watts of power at 1 percent distortion. The red trace is the subwoofer channel and shows that the amp produces just under 300 watts at 1 percent distortion.

The Consumer Technology Association (formerly the Consumer Electronics Association) has established a standard for the power and signal-to-noise ratio measurements of car audio amplifiers called CTA-2006-B (formerly CEA-2006-B). The specification states that power measurements are to be taken with the amplifier powered with a voltage of 14.4 volts, and the measurement is taken into a specified load (typically 4 ohms) with no more than 1 percent total harmonic distortion and noise, across the entire bandwidth of the amp.

Amplifier Power RatingsIn layman’s terms, the amp must perform as well producing bass as it does high-frequency information, and the specified power rating cannot include large amounts of distortion. While the 14.4V rating is somewhat high, it establishes a level playing field from which consumers can compare results.

Several companies include additional power measurements to highlight different characteristics and performance features of their products. JL Audio, for example, includes output power ratings tested at 12.5 volts. Rockford Fosgate includes dynamic power ratings taken using the IHF-202 standard. Essentially, the dynamic power rating demonstrates the reserve capacity of an amplifier’s power supply to drive transient signals that last no more than 20 milliseconds.

Do Some Manufacturers Cheat?

Amplifier Power RatingsIf you don’t see the CTA-2006 logo associated with a product you are considering, there are several ways that the numbers may not be directly comparable with other options. One easy way to inflate numbers is to increase the supply voltage to the amp. Depending on the design of an amplifier’s power supply, each additional volt provided to that power supply could theoretically increase the amplifier’s output by about 0.6 dB. That would be like a 100-watt amp being able to make about 115 watts.

Not specifying a distortion rating is another great way to fudge the numbers. Most Class AB amps can produce 60 percent to 70 percent more than their 1 percent rated power if they are driven hard into clipping. Of course, the music no longer sounds like music and you run the risk of damaging speakers because they’ve been over-powered.

Finally, some amplifiers have problems with producing power at the extreme ends of the frequency spectrum. To be compliant with the spec, the amp needs to make the rated power level at 20 Hz through 20 kHz, or whatever the upper limit is for the design.

Do Amplifier Power Ratings Really Matter?

Amplifier Power RatingsIf you are shopping for an amplifier, the power rating does nothing to tell you about the quality of one amplifier compared to another. You don’t need 100 watts to drive your tweeters and you certainly won’t be happy with a 25-watt amp driving a subwoofer in your car.

When you are comparing amplifiers, don’t get your knickers in a knot over a few watts. This applies specifically to amplifiers that come with birth certificates (documentation that states a particular amplifier’s power production capabilities). You can’t hear the difference between an amp that makes 300 watts and one that makes 305 watts. That difference would be a mere 0.07 decibels. You will hear a difference between a subwoofer amp that produces 100 watts and one that can deliver 300 watts.

We’ll add a note about “how things work” here. To increase the output of your audio system by 3dB, you need an amp that can produce twice as much power. So, to go from 90 dB in your car, you need twice as much power from the amp to raise the volume to 93dB and twice as much again to get to 96dB.

Shopping for a Car Audio Amplifier

When it’s time to go shopping for a car audio amplifier to provide more power to your speakers, drop into your local car stereo shop and speak with one of their product specialists. They can help you determine how much power is appropriate for the system you have in mind and choose an amp that sounds great and works with your budget.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Understanding the Specs – Amplifier Power Ratings

Amplifier Power RatingsWelcome to our new series about understanding product specifications. Our goal in these articles is to help you understand what the amplifier power ratings mean when you start to compare solutions. We’ll not only explain which numbers are good, but we’ll include a detailed description of what each specification means, how it’s measured and how it affects what you hear or experience. To start the series, let’s look at amplifiers. It’s a subject we’ve chosen because people tend to focus on amplifier specifications more than anything else when shopping.

Why Your Car Audio System Needs Power

Amplifier Power RatingsWithout a doubt, the most popular specification that consumers look at when purchasing a car audio amplifier is its power rating. An amplifier takes the small signal from your source unit and increases it in voltage and current to drive a low-impedance speaker. In a nutshell, the more power you have, the more loudly you can play your car stereo system before the signal going to the speakers distorts. The limit of how much power is required is determined by the power handling specifications of the speakers in the vehicle, their cone excursion limits and their distortion characteristics. We’ll look at those limits in a future article about speaker specifications.

How We Measure Power

When an amplifier is set up in a lab to measure power, it’s typically connected to a power supply and a set of load resistors. Many manufacturers use test equipment from companies like Audio Precision to measure the distortion characteristics of the output signal to determine the point at which you would hear the distortion.

Amplifier Power Ratings
The graph above shows the distortion of two channels of a five-channel amp relative to their power level. The blue trace is one of the four main channels and produces about 95 watts of power at 1 percent distortion. The red trace is the subwoofer channel and shows that the amp produces just under 300 watts at 1 percent distortion.

The Consumer Technology Association (formerly the Consumer Electronics Association) has established a standard for the power and signal-to-noise ratio measurements of car audio amplifiers called CTA-2006-B (formerly CEA-2006-B). The specification states that power measurements are to be taken with the amplifier powered with a voltage of 14.4 volts, and the measurement is taken into a specified load (typically 4 ohms) with no more than 1 percent total harmonic distortion and noise, across the entire bandwidth of the amp.

Amplifier Power RatingsIn layman’s terms, the amp must perform as well producing bass as it does high-frequency information, and the specified power rating cannot include large amounts of distortion. While the 14.4V rating is somewhat high, it establishes a level playing field from which consumers can compare results.

Several companies include additional power measurements to highlight different characteristics and performance features of their products. JL Audio, for example, includes output power ratings tested at 12.5 volts. Rockford Fosgate includes dynamic power ratings taken using the IHF-202 standard. Essentially, the dynamic power rating demonstrates the reserve capacity of an amplifier’s power supply to drive transient signals that last no more than 20 milliseconds.

Do Some Manufacturers Cheat?

Amplifier Power RatingsIf you don’t see the CTA-2006 logo associated with a product you are considering, there are several ways that the numbers may not be directly comparable with other options. One easy way to inflate numbers is to increase the supply voltage to the amp. Depending on the design of an amplifier’s power supply, each additional volt provided to that power supply could theoretically increase the amplifier’s output by about 0.6 dB. That would be like a 100-watt amp being able to make about 115 watts.

Not specifying a distortion rating is another great way to fudge the numbers. Most Class AB amps can produce 60 percent to 70 percent more than their 1 percent rated power if they are driven hard into clipping. Of course, the music no longer sounds like music and you run the risk of damaging speakers because they’ve been over-powered.

Finally, some amplifiers have problems with producing power at the extreme ends of the frequency spectrum. To be compliant with the spec, the amp needs to make the rated power level at 20 Hz through 20 kHz, or whatever the upper limit is for the design.

Do Amplifier Power Ratings Really Matter?

Amplifier Power RatingsIf you are shopping for an amplifier, the power rating does nothing to tell you about the quality of one amplifier compared to another. You don’t need 100 watts to drive your tweeters and you certainly won’t be happy with a 25-watt amp driving a subwoofer in your car.

When you are comparing amplifiers, don’t get your knickers in a knot over a few watts. This applies specifically to amplifiers that come with birth certificates (documentation that states a particular amplifier’s power production capabilities). You can’t hear the difference between an amp that makes 300 watts and one that makes 305 watts. That difference would be a mere 0.07 decibels. You will hear a difference between a subwoofer amp that produces 100 watts and one that can deliver 300 watts.

We’ll add a note about “how things work” here. To increase the output of your audio system by 3dB, you need an amp that can produce twice as much power. So, to go from 90 dB in your car, you need twice as much power from the amp to raise the volume to 93dB and twice as much again to get to 96dB.

Shopping for a Car Audio Amplifier

When it’s time to go shopping for a car audio amplifier to provide more power to your speakers, drop into your local car stereo shop and speak with one of their product specialists. They can help you determine how much power is appropriate for the system you have in mind and choose an amp that sounds great and works with your budget.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES

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