SWR Sound 1X10T Portable Speaker User Manual


 
Workingman’s Series Bass Speaker Enclosures • 12
IMPEDANCE (continued)
one 8 ohm enclosure, you know you can add one more 8 ohm speaker safely (8 divided by 2 = 4).
Although much less common, you could also add one, or even two, 16 ohm cabinets: two 16 ohm
cabinets in parallel have the same total impedance as one 8 ohm speaker.
To get the most efficiency out of your system with the fewest cabinets, your best choice would be
to connect two 8 ohm enclosures. Since you would be driving two cabinets of equal impedance,
each will receive half the power your amp can deliver. If your amplifier delivers 200 watts RMS at
4 ohms, then each cabinet will receive 100 watts RMS maximum under clipping. (Clipping is the
point where the power amplifier runs out of headroom and begins to distort.) If you had four 16
ohm enclosures, each one would receive a maximum of 50 watts RMS under clipping.
Continuous clipping is very harmful to speakers, especially in a bass system: the lower the note,
the longer the duration of DC content in the clipped signal. To understand what happens under this
condition, remember the example of what speakers do when a 9 volt battery is applied to them.
Now imagine what 20 or even 50 volts would do at the rate of 40 times per second! The results
can be overheating, disfiguring of the voice coil, overall fatigue, and—eventually—complete fail-
ure.
TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE
“I’m hearing unwanted distortion through my cabinet.”
This could be for a variety of reasons, but is probably being caused by one of the following three
sources: 1) the amplifier, 2) the cabinet’s woofer(s), and 3) the cabinet’s tweeter.
The best way to figure it out is to try and isolate “the big three.” If you have access to another
(working) bass cabinet, hook your amp up to it. If things are still distorting, it’s probably your
amp. Consult your amplifier owner’s manual for troubleshooting that piece of gear.
To determine whether the distortion’s coming from the tweeter or the woofers, first put your ear
up to the cabinet, play some notes, and see if you can hear where it’s emanating from. If you
can’t quite narrow it down, try turning off the Tweeter Attenuator control (switched to “Off,” or
on the Workingman’s Tower, all the way down [counter-clockwise]—effectively “off”). Play some
notes—if you hear distortion, you know it’s not the tweeter (see next paragraph…). If you don’t
hear any distortion with the tweeter off, try switching on (or turning up) the Tweeter Attenuator.
It may be that you just need to find the optimum tweeter level for your bass, amp, or style of play-
ing. If the tweeter distorts no matter what level the Tweeter Attenuator control is set to, it’s prob-
ably best to call the FMIC Service Department.
If the tweeter’s off AND the amp’s okay, and you’re still hearing distortion, there may be a prob-
lem with your woofer(s) and/or the cabinet’s internal workings. Inspect your woofers’ cones for
folded edges. There’s a very slight chance you have a defective woofer. Or, you may have blown
one or all of them by driving them too hard. Speakers that have been overdriven are easy to
detect, and generally do not fall under a manufacturer’s warranty. You should call the FMIC
Service Department to determine your next move.
“I hear intermittent distortion and/or crackling coming from the cabinet.”
This could be due to a bad speaker cable, or a bad speaker cable connection. First, make sure the
cable is securely connected to both the cabinet and the amp (or other cabinet). If you’re using more