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Your Amplifier’s Gain Control Is Not A Volume Control

Gain ControlFor decades, car audio enthusiasts have been fiddling around with the gain control on their amplifiers in hopes of “getting more out of them.” Many professional installers have scientific, repeatable processes in place to ensure these controls are set to provide the maximum performance and reliability from your audio system. Let’s look at the most misunderstood, and most often adjusted, control on car audio amplifiers – the gain control.

What Is a Gain Control?

When a manufacturer decides to develop an amplifier, they need to decide how many channels it will have, how much power it will produce, what additional features it will include and what source units it will work with. Because modern source units have maximum preamp output voltages that range from 1.7 to 5 volts, amplifiers have to be adjustable to make their full rated power when driven with these signals.

Gain ControlLet’s make up an example: Imagine a 100 watt mono amplifier that was designed to produce full power (100 watts) when it receives 2 volts of audio signal. This is a reasonable amount of signal gain, but leaves us open to two significant problems. What if we want to use this amplifier with a source unit that can only produce 1.7 volts? We can’t get the amplifier to full power even with the volume control on our radio turned all the way up. In fact, we only get 72.25 watts out of our amplifier. On the flip side, if we have a source unit that can put out 4 volts of signal, then the amp would attempt to make 400 watts with our fixed gain setting. Since the power supply of the amp was only designed to provide enough voltage to produce 100 watts, the signal would be severely clipped and distorted, and there is a great chance that the amplifier and your speakers might be damaged.

The Solution

For a single amplifier to work with multiple sources, amplifier manufacturers have to make the input signal level adjustable. We call this the gain or sensitivity control. It doesn’t adjust how much power the amplifier will make, but it does adjust how much of the input signal the amp uses to make full power.

There is a secondary reason for adjustability: Not every speaker has the same sensitivity. This means that sometimes you have more power than you need. Let’s say your front speakers produce 90 dB of output from 1 watt of power, but your rear speakers are much larger and produce 93 dB of output from the same 1 watt of power. For them to appear to be of equal loudness at the listening position, we only need half the power to the rear speakers. We turn down the sensitivity of the rear channels of an amplifier to balance these out.

Making Gains (Using Your Gain Control!)

Your installer may use one of many different processes to adjust the gain controls of your amplifier. We want the gain controls to be as low as possible, but still allow you to get full power from the amplifier. Why do we want the gain low? That is, perhaps, the fundamental key to this article.

We want the amplifier to accept an input signal with as much voltage as possible for it to produce full power. Having more voltage on your interconnect cables helps drown out noise. Less amplifier sensitivity (lower gain setting) also helps to reduce noise. When the amplifier gains are set properly, you get full power from your amp without unnecessary hiss or background noise.

There are four common methods for adjusting gain controls: by ear, with a small amplified speaker, with an oscilloscope or with a distortion detection device. Setting by ear with music is very difficult and can lead to inconsistent settings. That being said, if your installer uses a test tone, the “by ear” process can work quite reliably. Using a small amplified speaker is similar to that process – there is a test tone, but the small speaker allows your installer to check the preamp signal from the source unit, and in and out of any signal processors.

Gain ControlUsing an oscilloscope to set an amplifier’s gain control is one of the best ways to get an accurate reading. Oscilloscopes work for any frequency, so they are very flexible. Your installer can see exactly when the amp has reached its peak voltage.

Finally, companies like D’Amore Engineering and SMD have developed products designed specifically for mobile electronic installers to check for signal distortion on preamp or speaker signals. All you have to do is plug the device in and turn it up until the red Distortion LED comes on. Bam – done! A word of warning on these devices, though: They are very accurate and can detect distortions other than signal clipping. Many product design problems have been found when attempting to set gains with these.

How Can You Check Your Gains?

If the sensitivity controls on your amplifiers are set properly, you should be able to get your amplifiers to distort a little bit with the source unit at full volume. If you are wondering why a properly set amplifier will distort, that’s a great question. It’s called gain overlap. We want to have a little extra sensitivity in case we are playing a song that is recorded quietly. A great example of this is the well-known “Brothers In Arms” album by Dire Straits. It needs a good 5 extra dB of gain to get rocking. In fact, the original 1985 release from Warner Brothers Records had several songs where the loudest part of the song was below -5 dB. “Why Worry” has a peak level of -13.27 dB. A nightmare for an installer trying to set gains, but, luckily, that’s not a song most people rock out to.

If you can’t turn your volume control past halfway without your amplifiers running out of power (distorting), then it’s time to visit your local mobile electronics specialist. Likewise, if you hear a significant amount of hiss at low volume levels, then you likely need an adjustment.

Properly set gain controls won’t make your system quieter, and turning up the sensitivity doesn’t make your amplifier more power. Gain controls exist to ensure that your system is always working the best it can. Please leave them alone, or ask your installer about how they are set.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Subwoofer Enclosures, More Than Just a Box

Subwoofer EnclosuresFor decades, there has been discussion after discussion about which of the different subwoofer enclosures are “the best” and why. Let’s take a look at why we need a subwoofer enclosure at all, and how the three popular styles – sealed, vented and bandpass – differ in their design and performance.

Back-Wave Management

If you were to hook any speaker up to an amplifier, hold it in your hand and play music into it, you would find that you don’t hear any bass. That is because the sound coming from the front of the speaker cancels out the sound coming from the back. We need a way to keep the sound coming from the back of the speaker cone from interfering with the sound coming from the front. If you were to cut a hole in the middle of a large, flat piece of wood and mount the speaker in it, you would hear a lot more bass. In fact, until the half-wavelength of the bass frequencies becomes longer than the dimensions of the piece of wood, you will get really good, solid bass. If we put a speaker in an airtight enclosure, none of the sound coming from the back interferes with the sound coming from the front.

Power Handling

Subwoofer Enclosures
Different parts of the subwoofer determine its excursion and power handling.

The ability of a speaker to use the power produced by an amplifier is limited by two criteria – how far the speaker cone can move and how much heat the voice coil of the speaker can handle. Thermal power-handling limitations are based primarily on the design of a speaker – the size of the voice coil, how airflow is managed around the voice coil and the proximity of the stationary components of the motor assembly to the voice coil are the key contributing factors. The excursion-limited constraints are also part of the speaker’s design – how long the voice coil winding is, how tall the top plate is and how much suspension travel is available are the key factors.

Excursion

When it comes to reproducing bass, a speaker has to move four times as far each time the input frequency is halved. For example, a speaker moving 0.125 inches at 100 Hz has to move 0.5 inches to reproduce the same output level at 50 Hz and 2 inches at 20 Hz. You can see that, for the lowest of frequencies, cone excursion limitations are significant – very few speakers can move 2 inches without significant distortion.

When we put a speaker in an enclosure, the combination of the enclosure and the speaker create a high-pass filter. We are effectively decreasing the low-frequency output of the speaker. Why would we want to do this? The benefit of an enclosure is that we can control the motion of the speaker cone. Looking at a simple acoustic suspension (also known as a sealed) enclosure will be the simplest illustration of this explanation.

Compliance

Each and every speaker – from the biggest of subwoofers to the smallest of tweeters – has a springiness to the cone. We call this the compliance. We measure compliance by comparing it to a volume of air with the equivalent springiness. We call this characteristic of the speaker Vas. In general terms, a speaker with a very small Vas specification has a tight suspension, and a speaker with a large Vas has a softer suspension. There is a lot more to it than that, but for the discussion of enclosure features and benefits, that’s all we need to get into for now.

Subwoofer EnclosuresWhen we put a speaker in an enclosure, we stiffen the suspension. When you push in on the speaker cone, you are pushing against the speaker’s suspension (which wants to center the cone) and you are trying to pressurize the air in the enclosure. When the cone tries to move outward from rest, you are putting the air in the into a vacuum state – it wants to pull the cone back to its resting position. We do sacrifice low-frequency output, but we gain significant power handling and control over the motion of the speaker cone. For the latter, the combination of the air in the enclosure and the speaker suspension helps to stop the speaker cone from moving once an electrical signal starts it in motion.

Think of it like a shock absorber on a vehicle. You can see that having an enclosure is critical.

Acoustic Suspension Subwoofer Enclosures

The simplest of enclosures is called an acoustic suspension or sealed enclosure. In these enclosures, we are putting the speaker into an airtight box. When we put a speaker in an enclosure, the system resonates at a specific frequency that – we call this Fc. Below that frequency, the output is reduced at a rate of -12 dB per octave. If the system has a resonant frequency of 50 Hz, the output will be 12 dB quieter at 25 Hz.

Subwoofer Enclosures
Here we see the smooth response of the sealed enclosure.

Acoustic suspension enclosures are amongst the smallest of the different enclosures we will discuss. They are also the easiest to construct, and most forgiving regarding calculation error. If you combine the roll-off of the enclosure and speaker system with the increase in efficiency you get from the relatively small air volume of the vehicle interior (often called transfer function or cabin gain), you can get a very flat in-car response with good infrasonic output. Bass from an acoustic suspension enclosure is very tight and controlled, thanks to excellent transient response.

There is a down side. If you are looking for loud bass, then you need a driver that has a lot of excursion capability, and you need a reasonable amount of power to move the speaker cone back and forth to get the level of output you want. There is another drawback that isn’t talked about as much, and that is distortion. As a speaker increases in excursion, the amount of distortion it creates increases. Likewise, distortion increases near the resonant frequency of the speaker. So, what can you do?

Bass Reflex Subwoofer Enclosures

A bass reflex (also known as ported or vented) enclosure uses a vent to increase low-frequency output by making use of the speakers back-wave energy. The vent, often a round tube or sometimes a rectangular slot, has an area and a length. The specific area and length of the vent and their relationship to the total volume of the enclosure cause the column of air in the vent to resonate at a specific frequency when excited by the speaker. We typically tune bass reflex enclosures quite low to emphasize the bottom octave or so of the audible frequency range. They can be tuned higher to increase efficiency for high-SPL applications. There is always a sacrifice, though – when we tune the enclosure higher, we sacrifice low-frequency performance.

Bass reflex enclosures are typically larger than sealed enclosures. There is no hard-and-fast rule to associate with the size relationship, but 25–50% large is common. The trade-off for that extra volume is two-fold – more efficiency in the tuning frequency and more power handling, at some frequencies.

When the subwoofer used in a bass-reflex subwoofer enclosure produces frequencies around the resonant frequency of the vent/enclosure combination, the driver excursion is reduced to almost nothing and all the “work” is done by the vent. Put more succinctly, around the tuning frequency, most of the music is being produced by the vent. The benefit to this is that power-handling problems caused by cone excursion limitations are dramatically increased. Since the cone is barely moving, very high sound pressure levels can be achieved. Around the tuning frequency, power handling is limited by the thermal capabilities of the subwoofer.

As we mentioned earlier, one factor that contributes to loudspeaker distortion is cone excursion. With a bass reflex enclosure, the driver moves significantly less than with an acoustic suspension enclosure design. As long as the vent itself has enough area and a smooth transition at both openings, the distortion produced by a properly designed bass reflex enclosure can be impressively small.

Subwoofer Enclosures
Notice the rapid dropoff of the low end response (on the left) of this vented enclosure graph.

Nothing is free, is it? A factor in deciding to use a bass reflex design is how fast the output decreases below the tuning frequency. Where an acoustic suspension enclosure rolls off at -12 dB per octave, a bass reflex enclosure rolls off at 24 dB per octave. Below the tuning frequency, the vent acts more and more like a hole in the enclosure, offering increasingly less back pressure as frequency decreases. Designing for, and managing, driver excursion is a fundamental part of bass reflex enclosure design.

Bandpass Subwoofer Enclosures

We will quickly touch on bandpass enclosures to wrap up this article. There are several different designs for bandpass enclosures. Some use a sealed enclosure, and some a vented one. Independent of whether the rear chamber is sealed or vented, the output of the subwoofer plays into a vented enclosure. This enclosure acts as a low-pass filter. Why would we want to design a bandpass enclosure?

Subwoofer Enclosures
The reason for the name “bandpass” is easy to see when one looks at the response curve of the bandpass enclosure.

First and foremost, all of the output of the enclosure is produced by the vent or vents. This allows a creative designer to build an enclosure in the trunk of a vehicle and have the vent opening play through the rear parcel shelf. There have been some amazing bandpass enclosures build in the front storage area of mid- or rear-engine vehicles. The vent allows the bass to enter the interior of the vehicle. Bandpass enclosures can also offer impressive gains in efficiency over acoustic suspension and bass reflex enclosures, but they do so at the sacrifice of bandwidth and enclosure volume.

A bandpass enclosure has two resonant frequencies – one for each of the enclosures. The resultant management of cone excursion can allow a great deal of bass to be produced from limited excursion drivers. While the speaker cone itself does not move a great deal, the amount of work done by the motor assembly is still significant. You are still putting power into the speaker, and work is being done. Because the front chamber of the enclosure acts as a filter, it can also be very difficult to hear when the speaker is distorting.

Regarding the complexity of design, and forgiveness of construction error, bandpass enclosures are the most complicated to execute perfectly. Unlike an acoustic suspension or bass-reflex design, bandpass enclosure designs must be tailored exactly to the speaker they are being used with. Never trust the concept of a “generic” bandpass enclosure.

Lastly, because a bandpass enclosure includes an acoustic low-pass filter, it has to be used with good-quality, appropriately sized midbass drivers. If not, the bass can sound lost or disconnected relative to the rest of the music.

For More Details On Subwoofer Enclosures, Visit Your Local Specialist

As you can see, there are many ways to install a subwoofer – or any speaker, for that matter. Navigating the available space in the vehicle, as well as different speaker sizes and designs, can be tricky. The design and construction of an enclosure can be complex, especially when complex shapes are involved. Visit your local car audio specialist retailer to explore different enclosure options for your vehicle.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

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