Apesbrain wrote: 
> Huh? This makes no sense. Anyone with sufficient power can push their
> speakers to match whatever apparent loudness level yours deliver. I
> won't begin to doubt your ability to "hear things that others may not."

Sure it does. A basic Fact in the Audiophile community. This from an
Article.

-SPEAKER SENSITIVITY

SPEAKER SENSITIVITY IS CERTAINLY THE MOST IMPORTANT (AND MOST
OFTEN OVERLOOKED) FACTOR DETERMINING WHETHER NOISE IS AN ISSUE.
SENSITIVITY (EXPRESSED IN DECIBELS) IS THE AMOUNT OF LOUDNESS PRODUCED
BY THE SPEAKER AT A GIVEN DISTANCE (USUALLY 1 METER), FOR A GIVEN INPUT
SIGNAL (TYPICALLY 1 WATT). THE HIGHER THE RESULTING NUMBER, THE HIGHER
THE SENSITIVITY. A SPEAKER RATED AT 90DB PRODUCES A LOUDER VOLUME THAN
ONE RATED AT 85DB, WITH THE SAME INPUT. SPEAKERS WITH MEASURED
SENSITIVITIES BELOW 85DB ARE CONSIDERED LOW SENSITIVITY, MODERATELY
SENSITIVE SPEAKERS RANGE FROM THE MID 80’S TO THE LOW 90’S, AND HIGH
SENSITIVITY SPEAKERS ABOVE THAT. THERE ARE VERY EFFICIENT SPEAKER
SYSTEMS (TYPICALLY HORNS) RATED AT 100DB AND ABOVE.
FROM THIS INFORMATION, IT IS NOT HARD TO SEE THAT THE POTENTIAL
FOR NOISE BECOMES MUCH MORE OF AN ISSUE AS SPEAKER SENSITIVITY
INCREASES. A GIVEN SET OF ELECTRONICS MATED WITH A LOW SENSITIVITY
SPEAKER MAY PRODUCE NOISE LEVELS BARELY AUDIBLE JUST A FEW FEET AWAY,
BUT SUBSTITUTE A VERY HIGH SENSITIVITY SPEAKER AND NOISE WILL BE EASILY
HEARD AT THE LISTENING POSITION. 
-

Here is the Link to the entire article.
'
http://www.gcaudio.com/resources/howtos/systemnoise.html'
(http://www.gcaudio.com/resources/howtos/systemnoise.html)


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cut-Throat's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=43167
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=99970

_______________________________________________
Touch mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/touch

Reply via email to