• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Precision Audio & Tint

Thomasville: (229) 233 5001Bainbridge: (229) 246 2111
  • NEW! SHOP ONLINE
  • Financing/Lease to Own
    • Easy Payments, No Credit Needed
    • $0 Down, 0% APR Financing
  • Our Work
  • Reviews
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Request a Quote
  • About Us
    • Why Choose Us
    • Hours and Directions
    • Our Facilities
    • Virtual Tour Bainbridge Store
    • Virtual Tour Thomasville Store
    • Work for US
    • Gift Cards
    • Contact Us
  • Services
    • Car Audio
      • Backup Safety
      • Mobile Video
      • OEM Integration
      • Professional Installation
      • Smartphone Integration
      • Vehicle Navigation
    • Marine Audio
    • Motorcycle Audio
    • Remote Starters
    • Wheels & Tires
  • Window Tint
  • Customize Your Truck
    • Bed Covers
    • Floor Liners And Accessories
    • Grille Guards And Bumpers
    • Hitches
    • Leveling and Lift Kits
    • Jeep Parts And Accessories
    • Step Bars And Running Boards
    • Toolboxes
  • Brands
    • JL Audio
    • Kenwood
    • Pioneer
    • Fuel Wheels
    • Llumar Window Tint
    • Rockford Fosgate
    • Cam-Locker
    • Ranch Hand
    • Rough Country
    • WeatherTech
You are here: Home / ARTICLES / Does the Power Your Car Audio Amplifier Produces Really Matter?

Does the Power Your Car Audio Amplifier Produces Really Matter?

By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

Amplifier Power

Did you know that a difference of 20 watts of power between one car audio amplifier and another might be completely inaudible? That same 20-watt difference might mean having to keep your windows rolled up on the highway to hear your music. Let’s look at the physics of reproducing sound with moving-coil loudspeakers and why choosing an amplifier with a few watts more than another may be significant or irrelevant.

Car Audio Speakers and Amplifier Power

If you look at a typical higher-end 6.5-inch coaxial car audio speaker, you’ll find that it has an efficiency rating of 86 dB when driven with 1 watt of power and measured at a distance of 1 meter. If the reference is 2.83 V, then that’s 2 watts into a 4-ohm driver, and the efficiency number will be 3 dB higher at 89 dB. If it’s a 2-ohm driver with a 2.83V spec, then that’s 4 watts, and they will add another 3 dB. Aren’t specification games fun?

The first takeaway from this is that it takes a doubling of your amplifier’s power to increase a speaker’s output by 3 dB. At the same time, halving the power reduces the output by the same 3 dB. If you only need 80 dB of output, then our 86 dB efficient speaker will only need 0.25 watt of power to reach that level.

Amplifier Power
Power required for specific output levels relative to an 86 dB SPL 1W/1M speaker.

Scenario 1 – Deck Power and Door Speakers

Suppose you have a modest audio system that is made up of a typical aftermarket radio and a pair of equally typical door speakers. Most radios can produce about 20 watts of output per channel, and we’ll use our 89 dB example speakers (though now we have two of them, so the pair will produce 92 dB when each is powered with 1 watt). With 20 watts of power on tap, the system should produce just a smidge over 104 dB of output. Of course, this assumes that the speakers increase the output linearly for every doubling of power. At 20 watts, especially if they are reproducing bass frequencies, you are likely near their upper limit.

What if we switch the radio to a high-power unit like the Sony XAV-AX7000 that can produce 45 watts of power per channel? Now, assuming the speakers can handle the extra power, the system will produce about 107.5 dB of output. That extra 25 watts increases how loudly our music will play by 3.5 decibels. It doesn’t sound like a lot, but it would be audible.

Amplifier Power
Sony’s High-Power head units use an amplifier to produce an honest 45 watts of power per channel.

Scenario 2 – Small Subwoofer Amplifier Versus Large

In our second example, let’s look at the higher power levels involved with driving a subwoofer. Say we have a Rockford Fosgate amplifier capable of producing 1,000 watts of power. Considering the transfer function of the typical vehicle interior, a pair of 10-inch subwoofers in a vented enclosure might have an efficiency of about 101 dB at 40 Hz when each is driven with 1 watt. When we increase the power to the subs to 500 watts each, the system should produce 128 decibels of output. That’s pretty darned loud! Keeping in mind that we need to double or half the power level to produce a change of 3 dB, what happens when we pick an amplifier that can produce 1,050 watts or that same increase of 25 watts to each subwoofer? Well, the system will play 0.21 decibel louder. While you might be able to measure that with a Term-Lab SPL system, it’s unlikely you can hear that small of an increase.

Amplifier Power
The ARC Audio X2 1100.1 subwoofer amplifier is conservatively rated to produce 1,100 watts of power in a 1-ohm load.
Amplifier Power
The T1000-1bdCP monoblock amp from Rockford Fosgate can deliver 1,000 watts of power into a 1- or 2-ohm load.
Amplifier Power
For those looking for a subwoofer amplifier that can deliver 1,000 watts of power into a 1- or 2-ohm load, check out the Hertz ML Power 1.
Amplifier Power
The M ONE X from Helix has a power rating of 1,030 watts into a 1-ohm load.
Amplifier Power
The Voce Uno from Audison is a Class-AB amplifier that can deliver up to 1,700 watts of power into a 1-ohm load.

Looking at Power Specifications Using Decibel-Watts

While most of us are used to seeing the decibel unit used in the context of measuring volume levels, it can be applied to a variety of electrical applications. If you take a close look at the power measurements in any of the BestCarAudio.com Test Drive Reviews, you’ll see we list watts and a number called dBW, or decibel-watts. The unit dBW refers to decibels referenced to one watt of power. As such, if the amp produced 1 watt of power, it would be rated at 0 dBW, or no increase or decrease relative to 1 watt. If it made 8 watts, then it would be rated at 9 dBW. One hundred watts is 20 dBW, and 1,000 watts is 30 dBW.

Suppose your speakers or subwoofers can handle the power in terms of thermal capacity and cone excursion capability. In that case, you can add the dBW number to the 1-watt efficiency number of the speaker to estimate how loudly it will play. Of course, no midrange speaker is going to able to deal with 200 watts of power, and a subwoofer isn’t going to increase its output linearly when driven with 10,000 watts.

Backtracking for a moment, to provide some clarity, when we use an RTA or SPL meter to measure a sound source’s volume level, we measure dB SPL. Similar to the way that the decibel watt (dBW) references 1 watt of power, the dB SPL unit references 20 micropascals or, 0 dB. A sound level of 20 micropascals is considered the lowest hearing threshold of a young, healthy ear. Of course, if we can measure this pressure (20 micropascals), then 0 dB isn’t absolute silence or a vacuum. It’s just a reference level. In the same way, 0.25 watt is -6 dBW; it’s possible to have negative SPL numbers or a room that’s quieter than 0 dB. Microsoft built an anechoic test chamber that has a noise level of -20.35 dB SPL, or 20.35 decibels quieter than 0 dB. It’s said that the sound that air particles create from bumping into one another in a still room is -23 dB SPL.

Amplifier Power
The anechoic chamber in Microsoft’s Building B87 is the quietest room on earth, with a background noise level of -20.23 dB SPL.

When Watts Matter and When They Don’t

Let’s take all this information and put it into use. If you’re shopping for a new radio, then one that produces 45 watts is going to provide an audible improvement over one that produces only 20 watts. If you are shopping for an amplifier for your speakers, a 75-watt and a 100-watt amp will only increase output by just over 1 dB. If one subwoofer amplifier produces 25 watts more than one that makes 750 watts, the difference is only 0.14 dB. The best way to think of amplifiers is by ranking them as small, medium and large. A small stand-alone speaker amplifier would be 50 watts per channel. A large one would be 100-125 watts. A small sub amp would be 250-300 watts, a medium would be 600-800 watts, and a large would be 1,200-2,500 watts. Worrying about whether the amp makes 1,150 or 1,175 watts (a difference of 0.09 dBW) is a waste of time.

When it’s time to upgrade your car audio system with a new high-power radio or an amplifier, drop by your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer and ask to audition several options on the same set of speakers or subwoofers and the same source unit. This is the best way to determine which solution offers the least distortion and most accurate sound. Just a reminder, don’t get hung up on a few watts – that’s truly the least of your worries.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

About BestCarAudio.com

BestCarAudio.com is a showcase for the very best mobile electronics retailers in the world and a place to educate and inform interested consumers about existing and emerging technologies.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search our Articles and Installs

Recent Customer Review

Request a Quote
Car Audio

Car Audio

Precision Audio & Tint in Bainbridge and Thomasville are truck and car audio upgrade specialists. Whether you are interested in adding Apple … Read More »

Tags

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Amplifiers Android Auto Apple CarPlay Bed Covers Camlocker Chevrolet F-150 Ford Fuel Fuel Wheels GMC Grille Guards Hunter Road Force Jeep JL Audio Kenwood Leveling Kits Llumar Nitto Pioneer Radios RAM Ranch Hand ReadyLift Rockford Fosgate Rough Country Speakers Step Bars Subwoofers Toolboxes Toyota TrailFX Undercover WeatherTech Westin Window Tint Wrangler
A car running in a snowy parking lot at night with its headlights on

Understanding Bypass Modules and Data Interfaces in Remote Starter Systems

 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

Remote car starters have become one of the most sought-after upgrades for vehicle owners who want convenience, comfort, … [Read More...]

A scale with a speaker set on one side, and an amplifier on the other side, it is on top of a car and balanced in the middle

How Much Power Do You Really Need in a Car Audio System?

 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

One of the most common questions among car audio enthusiasts is, “How much amplifier power do I really need?” It’s a … [Read More...]

A pinnacle autosound speaker system

The Anatomy of a Clean Car Audio Installation: What Sets the Pros Apart

 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

When most people think about upgrading their car audio system, they focus on equipment: better speakers, a more powerful … [Read More...]

A confused looking woman sitting in the drivers seat of a car as it is driving down a road

Factory Sound vs. Aftermarket Upgrades: What You’re Really Missing

 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

For most vehicle owners, the factory-installed sound system is just another checkbox on the feature list. It might … [Read More...]

A cool futuristic looking Mercedes car in an audio shop

A Brief History of CAN Bus in Automotive Applications

 By BestCarAudio.com Leave a Comment

The Controller Area Network, or CAN bus, is a communications protocol designed to let electronic control units (ECUs) … [Read More...]

Bainbridge Location


Get Directions to Precision Audio's Bainbridge Location
Address:
909 Dothan Road, Bainbridge, GA 39817
Phone: 229-246-2111
Secondary phone: 229-246-3888
Email: salesstaff@precisionga.com

Opening Hours:
Monday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Tuesday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Wednesday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Thursday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Friday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Saturday : Closed
Sunday : Closed

Thomasville Location


Get Directions to Precision Audio's Thomasville Location
Address:
12588 US Highway 319 N., Thomasville, GA 31757
Phone: 229-233-5001
Email: thomasville@precisionga.com

Opening Hours:
Monday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Tuesday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Wednesday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Thursday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Friday : 8:30 am – 5:30 pm
Saturday : Closed
Sunday : Closed

MESA retailer

Copyright © 2025 Precision Audio & Tint · Privacy Policy · Website by 1sixty8 media, inc. · Log in