It boils down to some simple math.
An amplifier takes an input voltage and multiplies it. The amount the amp multiplies by is the gain. If your amp outputs 50 volts with an input of 1 volt and then the gain is 50.
Vout/Vin = gain
50V/1V = 50
or this can be rearranged to give
Vout = Vin x gain
Your example amp has a maximum output of 200 watts into 8 ohms. If you take the 200, multiply it times 8 and then take the square root of that, it will tell you the maximum voltage your amp can produce. In your case that's 40 volts.
voltage = square root of (power x ohms)
A typical power amp will have a gain of around 20 so to get 40 volts out you would need to put 2 volts in.
Vout = Vin x gain
20 x 2V = 40V
It takes 2 volts to get max power so the sensitivity of the amp is said to be 2 volts.
If it had a volume control this would be with the volume all the way up.
An amplifier takes an input voltage and multiplies it. The amount the amp multiplies by is the gain. If your amp outputs 50 volts with an input of 1 volt and then the gain is 50.
Vout/Vin = gain
50V/1V = 50
or this can be rearranged to give
Vout = Vin x gain
Your example amp has a maximum output of 200 watts into 8 ohms. If you take the 200, multiply it times 8 and then take the square root of that, it will tell you the maximum voltage your amp can produce. In your case that's 40 volts.
voltage = square root of (power x ohms)
A typical power amp will have a gain of around 20 so to get 40 volts out you would need to put 2 volts in.
Vout = Vin x gain
20 x 2V = 40V
It takes 2 volts to get max power so the sensitivity of the amp is said to be 2 volts.
If it had a volume control this would be with the volume all the way up.