TheGuitarist
Well-known member
Ok so this may be another dumb question from me, but its best to ask first before i blow something up.
I just fused my NS-10mxs (don't wanna know your opinion about the speakers) and i'm not sure what value to put in. I fused the tweeter and woofers seperately.
Most people say get .75A for the tweeter and 1.5 for the woofer, i could only get .8 and 1.6, which i don't think is too much of a problem, but here is my dilemma. My ns-10s have a vastly higher wattage rating than the original ns-10s. 120w avg and 150w peak. I'll be using an adcom 555 to power the speakers which is 200W a side, no attenuation control (using one of igors wonderful CRM kits for that but i'm sure i could add a stepped attenuator onto the unit if i really needed to).
Do those values sound like they'd still be correct? I'm not sure how much voltage a power amp puts out so i'm not sure if i should raise the value if the speakers can handle more, or does wattage have little effect on current?
I just fused my NS-10mxs (don't wanna know your opinion about the speakers) and i'm not sure what value to put in. I fused the tweeter and woofers seperately.
Most people say get .75A for the tweeter and 1.5 for the woofer, i could only get .8 and 1.6, which i don't think is too much of a problem, but here is my dilemma. My ns-10s have a vastly higher wattage rating than the original ns-10s. 120w avg and 150w peak. I'll be using an adcom 555 to power the speakers which is 200W a side, no attenuation control (using one of igors wonderful CRM kits for that but i'm sure i could add a stepped attenuator onto the unit if i really needed to).
Do those values sound like they'd still be correct? I'm not sure how much voltage a power amp puts out so i'm not sure if i should raise the value if the speakers can handle more, or does wattage have little effect on current?