Clipping happens when an amp receives an INPUT signal beyond its capability.
There are two theories why a clipping amp overheats tweeters: excess harmonics & compression.
The older theory, excess harmonics, suggests that the clipped low frequency signals create higher frequency harmonic multiples of themselves which overload the tweeters.
The compression theory suggests that, although the low frequencies have become limited due to a shortage of power, the unclipped high frequencies overload the tweeters.
Odds are both theories are right. Both rest on the tweeter's greater efficiency relative to the low frequency drivers.
So what's to blame for the tweeter damage? The wacky sounding distortion? The amp's evil heat ray? Neither! The overdriven speaker coil spending too much time outside the gap with its magnet structure loses the heat transfer game and so overheats and burns.
There are two theories why a clipping amp overheats tweeters: excess harmonics & compression.
The older theory, excess harmonics, suggests that the clipped low frequency signals create higher frequency harmonic multiples of themselves which overload the tweeters.
The compression theory suggests that, although the low frequencies have become limited due to a shortage of power, the unclipped high frequencies overload the tweeters.
Odds are both theories are right. Both rest on the tweeter's greater efficiency relative to the low frequency drivers.
So what's to blame for the tweeter damage? The wacky sounding distortion? The amp's evil heat ray? Neither! The overdriven speaker coil spending too much time outside the gap with its magnet structure loses the heat transfer game and so overheats and burns.