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In the Forum: Horn-Loaded Speakers
In the Thread: Good midbass is complicated, if not unobtainable.
Post Subject: I have no idea why acoustic watt is needed.Posted by Romy the Cat on: 12/23/2015
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 Gargoyle wrote:

My guess is was referring to the pressure levels at the surface of the woofer(s) compared to that of a horn. The sound pressure of a direct radiator has to be much high to achieve a certain SPL at the same distance of a lower pressure horn.

It is a phrase more commonly used in pro-sound circles. Typical direct radiator types are only capable of producing ~3 acoustical watts for every 100 electrical watts input.

One acoustical watt is ~107 db from an OMNIdirectional source.

I haven't done them math to see how your array compares, but I can surmise that Scott is suggesting that your particular implementation in that room was not up to the task of orchestra, which is considered to be ~1 acoustic watt in power. Probably OK for rock though.
Gargoyle, I am not familiar with this dimension: acoustic watt in power, neither have I been familiar how my playback sound “for rock”. The Wikipedia dives a definition of Sound Power or Acoustic Power. I understand what they say but I see not practical use of this measurement, at least for myself. I do not know what kind reasoning you used to convert the reportedly low Acoustic Power into disability of this or that playback to “play orchestra”.  I do not defend my playback – I am very comfortable what it did in that room and I very much insist that it was crème de la crème of all multichannel integrations (and I heard a LOT). Mind you that I did it with knowing what Acoustic Power is.

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