W walters Banned Jun 9, 2005 #21 If you put a square wave instead of a sine wave for the input and measure the output power of a amplifer it doubles i think RMS square wave output power Peak output power
If you put a square wave instead of a sine wave for the input and measure the output power of a amplifer it doubles i think RMS square wave output power Peak output power
audioguru Well-Known Member Most Helpful Member Jun 9, 2005 #22 walters said: If you put a square wave instead of a sine wave for the input and measure the output power of a amplifer it doubles i think RMS square wave output power Peak output power Click to expand... That's correct. Only if the peak-to-peak voltages are the same.
walters said: If you put a square wave instead of a sine wave for the input and measure the output power of a amplifer it doubles i think RMS square wave output power Peak output power Click to expand... That's correct. Only if the peak-to-peak voltages are the same.
W walters Banned Jun 9, 2005 #23 Yea same Peak to Peak voltage the square wave has more AREA i think than the sine wave so you get more output peak power
Yea same Peak to Peak voltage the square wave has more AREA i think than the sine wave so you get more output peak power