The resistance of a potentiometer can be adjusted by turning the knob or slider on the potentiometer. By changing the resistance, the volume of the speaker can be controlled.
There are several technologies, one is a wire with resistance that is wound loosly around a toroidal core (in the shape of a donut) and a contact sweeping along the surface makes electrical connection with different numbers of turns as it rotates around the "donut" thus giving variable resistance.
Wattage is the power applied to a speaker. More power usually means more volume. The sound pressure that a speaker will produce will be defined by the power applied, the resistance or impedance of the speaker (a lower impedance speaker will be louder) and the sensitivity of the speaker as a whole (the efficiency to turn the power into sound).
Electric energy can be converted to sound energy through the use of a device such as a speaker. The electric current passing through the speaker's coil creates a magnetic field that interacts with a permanent magnet, causing the speaker cone to vibrate and produce sound waves. The variations in the electric current control the intensity and frequency of the sound produced.
The magnetic force in a speaker is used to drive the motion of the speaker cone. When an audio signal passes through a coil of wire (voice coil) attached to the speaker cone, it creates a magnetic field that interacts with the permanent magnet in the speaker. This interaction results in the movement of the speaker cone, producing sound waves.
The resonant frequency of a speaker is the frequency at which the speaker naturally vibrates or resonates when no external force is acting upon it. It is an important characteristic that affects the speaker's performance and efficiency, and is typically specified by the manufacturer. Operating a speaker at its resonant frequency can lead to distortion and potential damage.
SPEAKER, REMOTE CONTROL SPEAKER, REMOTE CONTROL
No. Load resistance is the value of the element actually doing the work of the circuit it is connected to. A speaker connected to an amplifier is the load.
The wattage and ohms of a speaker are not related; the resistance for speakers is usually 4 or 8 ohms.
a powerful Speaker who had considerable control over the House
Maybe lol
When choosing a bathroom speaker light for your home, consider features such as water resistance, sound quality, brightness of the light, ease of installation, compatibility with your devices, and any additional features like Bluetooth connectivity or voice control.
Absolutely. The controls are very easy to use, sound is adjusted very easily, the speakers are small but powerful and plugins for mp3 or headphones are neatly situated on the volume control scroller. You can easily control the amount of base or acoustics as well.
This is strictly dependent of the type of control being used. If you just have a potentiometer (variable rotary resistor) then connect ONE wire from the source to the middle (wiper) terminal on the Pot. then from either other terminal on the Pot. continue the circuit to the speaker.This just limits the amount of signal going to one speaker. THIS IS ONLY APPLICABLE WHEN ONE SPEAKER IS USED. If you could direct me to the instructions that came with your controller, I could help you out.See my Bio.If you purchased this from a Radio Shack, or similar electronics supplier, tell me the part, model number and I look it up for you.ABOVE ANSWER IS TOO SIMPLISTIC....Speaker volume control, done properly, is not a matter of just adding resistance (or variable resistance) to the line. Properly done, the amplifier's output impedence must be matched to maintain proper loading and avoid premature burnout and distortion.Dynamic speaker connections (2, 4, 8 ohm, for example) can have a volume control added by using a potentionmeter (variable resistor) with decent results and without doing damage or getting too much distortion. For most applications this is okay.What you need for a simple resistance control:A 2-gang potentiometer of about 15 to 25 ohms rating. Here's more than you'll ever need to know: http://beavishifi.com/articles/Volume_Control/index.htmTHE RIGHT WAY:The right way to do this is to use an 'impedence matching' control. These controls allow you to put on strings of speakers yet maintain a constant impedence to the amplifier output (up to the power limit of the amp, of course).Here, now, is what you need: http://www.audioc.com/accessories1/misc/vcontrol.htmANOTHER WAY:There is another way to do all this.. that is if you have pro-grade amps. You can use what is called 70volt lines. 70volt amp outputs allow you to string many speakers down the line (each with its own step down transformer, not hard to wire or figure out). If this is of interest then you may want to Google it and go from there.HOPE THIS HELPS.. Caio!
The Speaker of the House is the next in line of succession.
The Speaker of the House is in control.
ORDER
The Speaker