I want to add a line out to a 100 watt SS modeling amp with an 8Ω speaker. The following is from another forum, Enzo in fact.
"All in all, the impedance shouldnlt much matter to a line out. A line out from a speaker line is just a voltage divider. The line out will not draw any current, so higher resistances will be invisible to the amp. The ratio of resistors is what determines the voltage division, not the resistors themselves. IN other words, If I put two 10k resistors in series then across the speaker output, the junction of resistors would be at half the signal level of the speaker. If I did the same thing with 22k resistors, the junction point would STILL be half the speaker voltage. SO if you see something like a 10k resistor from the speaker hot joining a 1k resistor to ground, at their junction there would be about 1/10 the speaker signal at the junction. Feed that junction out as a line signal.
Let's make up an example: 50 watt solid state amp into an 8 ohm speaker, full output. SOlving for voltage, we find 20v of signal across 8 ohms is 50 watts. SO we have 20 volots at the speaker, and you want to drop that down to about a volt - line level. SO you;d need a 20/1 voltage divider. COmes to mind easily a 22k and a 1k resistor. Put them in seriess, then 22k free end to speaker, and 1k free end to ground. 1v signal then is across the 1k resistor."
The old fella who plays the amp will never get near 100 watts, so why can't I use the above values for a 50 watt amp to make sure I get a good signal level at lower volumes? If someday someone does drive it harder, they could just trim down the input on whatever board or whatever they are feeding, right? The owner said he doesn't care about a level control, and would rather not pay extra for it.
My other question is about polarity. Is the junction between the two resistors in phase with the speaker, and why?
"All in all, the impedance shouldnlt much matter to a line out. A line out from a speaker line is just a voltage divider. The line out will not draw any current, so higher resistances will be invisible to the amp. The ratio of resistors is what determines the voltage division, not the resistors themselves. IN other words, If I put two 10k resistors in series then across the speaker output, the junction of resistors would be at half the signal level of the speaker. If I did the same thing with 22k resistors, the junction point would STILL be half the speaker voltage. SO if you see something like a 10k resistor from the speaker hot joining a 1k resistor to ground, at their junction there would be about 1/10 the speaker signal at the junction. Feed that junction out as a line signal.
Let's make up an example: 50 watt solid state amp into an 8 ohm speaker, full output. SOlving for voltage, we find 20v of signal across 8 ohms is 50 watts. SO we have 20 volots at the speaker, and you want to drop that down to about a volt - line level. SO you;d need a 20/1 voltage divider. COmes to mind easily a 22k and a 1k resistor. Put them in seriess, then 22k free end to speaker, and 1k free end to ground. 1v signal then is across the 1k resistor."
The old fella who plays the amp will never get near 100 watts, so why can't I use the above values for a 50 watt amp to make sure I get a good signal level at lower volumes? If someday someone does drive it harder, they could just trim down the input on whatever board or whatever they are feeding, right? The owner said he doesn't care about a level control, and would rather not pay extra for it.
My other question is about polarity. Is the junction between the two resistors in phase with the speaker, and why?
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