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Old October 1st 04, 01:32 AM
Gary Schafer
 
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On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 09:41:43 -0700, Bill Turner
wrote:

On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 19:16:26 -0400, Ken Scharf
wrote:

I built a small audio power amp to drive my computer
speakers. With one channel driven into 8 ohms the PP
voltage measured at 1khz was 24v before clipping.
With both channels driven it was 20v.


_________________________________________________ ________

Peak-to-peak voltage has no meaning when computing power. There is no
such thing as peak-to-peak power.

You can use either the peak voltage or RMS voltage, and in either case
the formula is E(squared)/R. Your answer will be either peak power or
RMS power.


Since everyone is being a little picky, there is also no such thing as
RMS power. When you use RMS voltage you get average power. :)

73
Gary K4FMX