01-17-12: Charles1dadCharles, that can be calculated (to a reasonable approximation). Caveats are that the calculation assumes that speaker efficiency (or, alternatively, voltage sensitivity and impedance) is known accurately, and that the calculation neglects the contribution of room reflections to SPL.
I don`t want to measure speakers, but want to know the power output of the amplifier at different volumes. IOW how much power is used at say SPL of 70db vs 85db(how hard is the amp working) measured in watts.
Your Total Eclipse II's are spec'd at 94 db/1 watt/1 meter. For a box type speaker (as opposed to a planar) subtract 6 db for each doubling of distance. Add 3 db to approximately reflect the presence of two speakers.
So at a listening distance of 4 meters (about 13 feet), 1 watt per channel would result in an SPL of 94+3-6-6 = 85 db.
That figure can be adjusted to reflect different power levels based on the db relationship of the ratio of two powers, which is 10logarithm(P1/P2). From that it can be calculated that a 15 db reduction in SPL corresponds to reducing the power level by a factor of 31.6. So a 70 db SPL at 4 meters would correspond to (1 watt/31.6) = 0.032 watts.
The 8 watt maximum power rating of your Franks would correspond to an SPL at 4 meters of 85 + 10log(8/1) = 94 db.
For other listening distances, adjust up or down based on 20 times the logarithm of the distance ratio. For instance, the SPL at 3 meters would be higher than the SPL at 4 meters by 20log(4/3) = 2.5 db.
Best regards,
-- Al