- #1
Tesladude
- 168
- 1
So my question is about calculating wattage with a sine wave.
So with speakers I always just thought of it as the basic vi=w
So a sine wave of 12v through 4 ohms will produce three amps and thus 36watts.
But when you put a square wave and use pulse width modulation on something like an led or fan you can simulate a different voltage and then come out with a different wattage.
I know that sine waves acts something like a 70% duty cycle square wave, so would 12v into 4 ohms actually give me 17.6 watts on a speaker instead of the 36 that I previously calculated? (or anything else for that matter)?
So with speakers I always just thought of it as the basic vi=w
So a sine wave of 12v through 4 ohms will produce three amps and thus 36watts.
But when you put a square wave and use pulse width modulation on something like an led or fan you can simulate a different voltage and then come out with a different wattage.
I know that sine waves acts something like a 70% duty cycle square wave, so would 12v into 4 ohms actually give me 17.6 watts on a speaker instead of the 36 that I previously calculated? (or anything else for that matter)?