tonequester here.
Greetings to all. I had some time to kill, so I decided to raid my junkpile collection of components and try my hand at signal attentuation. The "circuit" that I
built was inserted between a 15W. Fender s.s. practice amps speaker output wires, and the amps own speaker terminals. The total D.C. resistance of the "circuit" is 13.1 Ohms
including the hook-up wires. I used a jury rigged signal generator which gave me a steady frequency of 1541hz, at 1.71V.A.C. at the generators output. I noticed that when the generator was connected to the amps speaker terminals, the voltage dropped to 1.47V.A.C. When I connected the generator to the input of my "circuit", the output of the attenuation "circuit" gave me a voltage reading of .020V.A.C. I figured this to be a 98.83% attenuation of the input(f.y.i.- I provided no adjustment pot or rheostat in the "circuit6"). When I applied the attenuated signal to the input of the amp, the volume was definitely attenuated but not nearly as much as I had expected. I do realize that attenuating
a voltage does not translate directly into the same attenuation with volume, because of the way that the human ear perceives changes in volume. In other words, half of the power output does not give one half of the volume. I'm more than a little confused with the whole decibel thing, and only on this forum did I come to learn that signal voltage input does not correlate 1 to 1 with volume, as perceived. Another f.y.i., the attenuated signal remained 1541hz. I checked this with the frequency function of my True RMS DMM. Also, this "experiment" was performed with the amps volume set on 1 at all times. I did not(yet) attempt to check out what would happen byu adjusting the volume, or
using max.volume. If anybody has any thoughts or opinions concerning why I got the results that I did, I would appreciate hearing them. OH ! Another f.y.i., The current
readings that I checked, in the same manner that I checked voltage was right in step with the attenuation that I obtained. Thanks in advance for any attempts to help me understand this. Please, no derogatory comments, I know my limits already ! tonequester .
Greetings to all. I had some time to kill, so I decided to raid my junkpile collection of components and try my hand at signal attentuation. The "circuit" that I
built was inserted between a 15W. Fender s.s. practice amps speaker output wires, and the amps own speaker terminals. The total D.C. resistance of the "circuit" is 13.1 Ohms
including the hook-up wires. I used a jury rigged signal generator which gave me a steady frequency of 1541hz, at 1.71V.A.C. at the generators output. I noticed that when the generator was connected to the amps speaker terminals, the voltage dropped to 1.47V.A.C. When I connected the generator to the input of my "circuit", the output of the attenuation "circuit" gave me a voltage reading of .020V.A.C. I figured this to be a 98.83% attenuation of the input(f.y.i.- I provided no adjustment pot or rheostat in the "circuit6"). When I applied the attenuated signal to the input of the amp, the volume was definitely attenuated but not nearly as much as I had expected. I do realize that attenuating
a voltage does not translate directly into the same attenuation with volume, because of the way that the human ear perceives changes in volume. In other words, half of the power output does not give one half of the volume. I'm more than a little confused with the whole decibel thing, and only on this forum did I come to learn that signal voltage input does not correlate 1 to 1 with volume, as perceived. Another f.y.i., the attenuated signal remained 1541hz. I checked this with the frequency function of my True RMS DMM. Also, this "experiment" was performed with the amps volume set on 1 at all times. I did not(yet) attempt to check out what would happen byu adjusting the volume, or
using max.volume. If anybody has any thoughts or opinions concerning why I got the results that I did, I would appreciate hearing them. OH ! Another f.y.i., The current
readings that I checked, in the same manner that I checked voltage was right in step with the attenuation that I obtained. Thanks in advance for any attempts to help me understand this. Please, no derogatory comments, I know my limits already ! tonequester .
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