Speaker wattage & recommendations for 5 watt amp?
Moderator: jingle_jangle
Speaker wattage & recommendations for 5 watt amp?
I've recently acquired a nice little hand wired 5 watt head based on a Fender Champ. I'm building a cabinet for it but can't decide on whether to go 8" or 10" speaker.
Also, what wattage should I be looking for? Is a 30 watt speaker too high? I can't seem to find a 10" speaker in a lower wattage.
Also, what wattage should I be looking for? Is a 30 watt speaker too high? I can't seem to find a 10" speaker in a lower wattage.
listen to clips from our new ep
http://www.ramonahq.com
http://www.ramonahq.com
You probably don't want anything under ten, and luckily will likely have a tough time finding a modern guitar speaker at that rating.
It will take longer to fully break in a speaker of much higher wattage, but the power rating is less important to the sound of the speaker than the sonority of the actual speaker in question.
What I mean is that if you like the sound of an Alnico Gold, just finding a speaker with a lower rating may be too dark for your tastes, etc.
Some people believe that "speaker breakup" is a positive characteristic of pushing a speaker. I am not one of them. I do like the sound of a good speaker driven hard enough to "open up," but I apologize that this is a fairly nebulous term, as some of the good sound out of playing loud has more to do with the perception of sound in the ear than the physics of the speaker.
FYI: I know Weber has some that have lower ratings than 30W in 10" and 12" sizes.
It will take longer to fully break in a speaker of much higher wattage, but the power rating is less important to the sound of the speaker than the sonority of the actual speaker in question.
What I mean is that if you like the sound of an Alnico Gold, just finding a speaker with a lower rating may be too dark for your tastes, etc.
Some people believe that "speaker breakup" is a positive characteristic of pushing a speaker. I am not one of them. I do like the sound of a good speaker driven hard enough to "open up," but I apologize that this is a fairly nebulous term, as some of the good sound out of playing loud has more to do with the perception of sound in the ear than the physics of the speaker.
FYI: I know Weber has some that have lower ratings than 30W in 10" and 12" sizes.
"rubber heads don't dent easily"
I'm not one of the resident experts, but I looked on The Fender Amp Filed Guide webpage and found that the Champ was rated at six watts amd used an 8" speaker. A similar speaker (4 ohm) can be found at Angela Instruments:
http://www.angela.com/catalog/speakers/guitar.html
http://www.angela.com/catalog/speakers/guitar.html
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
Absolutely, Ken. For this kind of amp I believe you would need a speaker with the highest possible sensitivity (90db per watt per metre or higher IMO) and you should match the speaker impedence with the amp's output impedence. A 2 or 4 ohm speaker connected to an 8 ohm amp may spell disaster for the amp. A lot depends on the amp but believe me, it can happen!
"Never eat more than you can lift." - Mr. Moon
Luckily I'm able to switch the impedance on this amp. I still haven't decided what make yet. My quest continues...
listen to clips from our new ep
http://www.ramonahq.com
http://www.ramonahq.com
