Hi,
I'm building some bookshelf hi-fi speakers, and considering protection mechanisms. Some people think fuses are too slow to be good speaker protection, while polyswitches are only a little better (~3 seconds) [1]. I'm considering bulbs, which seem like they ought to be faster (but I guess I don't really know), and would like to hear your opinions about how to appoach this.
Parts express sells bulbs for this, which are rated for 12.8V, .97A [2]. My naive supposition would be that ~1A across an 8 Ohm load (my tweeter) implies that the bulb will begin to illuminate (and the signal will begin to compress) when dissipating about 8W. This doesn't seem like very much, in spite of the fact that these bulbs seem to be intended for high powered PA horns and such.
How does this actually work and how should I choose a bulb (or something else instead)?
[1] How to calculate fuse value for speaker protection? | Audiokarma Home Audio Stereo Discussion Forums
[2] Speaker Crossover Tweeter Protector Lamp
I'm building some bookshelf hi-fi speakers, and considering protection mechanisms. Some people think fuses are too slow to be good speaker protection, while polyswitches are only a little better (~3 seconds) [1]. I'm considering bulbs, which seem like they ought to be faster (but I guess I don't really know), and would like to hear your opinions about how to appoach this.
Parts express sells bulbs for this, which are rated for 12.8V, .97A [2]. My naive supposition would be that ~1A across an 8 Ohm load (my tweeter) implies that the bulb will begin to illuminate (and the signal will begin to compress) when dissipating about 8W. This doesn't seem like very much, in spite of the fact that these bulbs seem to be intended for high powered PA horns and such.
How does this actually work and how should I choose a bulb (or something else instead)?
[1] How to calculate fuse value for speaker protection? | Audiokarma Home Audio Stereo Discussion Forums
[2] Speaker Crossover Tweeter Protector Lamp
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