Originally posted by: AlienCraft
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Originally posted by: silverpig
How do you blow speakers then?
Too much power to them?
It is possible to blow speakers with a perfectly matched amp / speaker combination.
If I throw a microphone on the floor, the impact noise could cause speaker failure.
There are different types of speaker failure for different causes.
#1. OverExcursion...
The voice coil literally jumps out of the gap.
#2. Over Heating....
The voice coil is gradually brought to failure by continuous application of full rated power and a material flaw eventually opens the coil.
Usually in an install situation where the speakers do not get turned over and over as in loading after gigs and transporting. Thus the insulator that has melted collects at the bottom. Then at the top, a potential for abrasion occurs, where the insulator has migrated from.
#3. DC..... an amplifier that outputs DC as it fails, usually shorts out the voice coil. Occasionally it will throw it one way or the other and weld it there. This requires a new magnet structure in addition to the recone kit.
Clipping generates harmonics which cause excessive power at those frequencys. This is what causes voice coils to destruct.
Just because it happens all the time doesn't make it an "Urban Myth".
I send recone jobs in all the time from DJ's who clip the output of their mixer into their amps. I have a club install where it is guaranteed to recone 3 / 4 times a year because of morons who think fuzzy sounds good.
After hearing some of the car audio installs out there rattling down the street, I don't think they are a good place to start referencing qualifications.