What is clipping? And by that I mean what in the amp is doing the clipping. Just because you see clips on the waveform doesn;t mean they are coming from the power amp. For example, in the little Peavey Classic 30, the phase inverter clips at anything over about 4 on the clean volume. The power amp is capable of much more amplification clean beyond that point.
I don't want to stir up the whole debate over measuring power output at clean only. After all, if you kill one side of the signal so the thing NEVER plays clean, does that mean it puts out zero power, even when at deafening levels? But Just watching a scope doesn't answer that. If your tone stack stage is clipping, then it isn;t fair to the power amp to say the amp only makes 3 watts because the thing "is clipping" over than amount.
Since all your readings are in peak to peak, I have to assume these are scope screen readings, not AC voltmeter readings.
Just for science, crank the thing up to where it seems as loud as it is going to get to your ears. Forget whether it is clipping or not for now. Connect an AC voltmeter across the speaker, and what do you get. Make a power calculation from that figure and the speaker nominal impedance. What power do you come up with that way?
I understand the idea of clean onset of clipping measurements for hifi amps, and why that might be the only "fair" means of comparisons between amps. But this is a guitar amp, not a hifi, and in my opinion, power ratings for guitar amps are not about fair hifi power readings, they are basically a general idea of how loud the thing will be. If amplifier B sounds about 6db louder than amplifier A, most players are not concerned that amplifier B is really 20 watts less than amplifier A when measured "fairly."
I don't want to stir up the whole debate over measuring power output at clean only. After all, if you kill one side of the signal so the thing NEVER plays clean, does that mean it puts out zero power, even when at deafening levels? But Just watching a scope doesn't answer that. If your tone stack stage is clipping, then it isn;t fair to the power amp to say the amp only makes 3 watts because the thing "is clipping" over than amount.
Since all your readings are in peak to peak, I have to assume these are scope screen readings, not AC voltmeter readings.
Just for science, crank the thing up to where it seems as loud as it is going to get to your ears. Forget whether it is clipping or not for now. Connect an AC voltmeter across the speaker, and what do you get. Make a power calculation from that figure and the speaker nominal impedance. What power do you come up with that way?
I understand the idea of clean onset of clipping measurements for hifi amps, and why that might be the only "fair" means of comparisons between amps. But this is a guitar amp, not a hifi, and in my opinion, power ratings for guitar amps are not about fair hifi power readings, they are basically a general idea of how loud the thing will be. If amplifier B sounds about 6db louder than amplifier A, most players are not concerned that amplifier B is really 20 watts less than amplifier A when measured "fairly."
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