What’s the relationship between gain (dB) and power (watts)?


Is there one?  My new used 300+ epic Bryston amp has a gain switch on the back toggling between 23 and 29 dB of gain.  
redwoodaudio

Showing 1 response by minorl

Look at it this way.

A Designer has design requirements.

Design an amp that produces 250 watts per channel with an input of x mV into an 8 ohm load that will produce the 250 watts per channel max without clipping.  an input impedance of y Ohms, output impedance of P Ohms, frequency range of 20 Hz to 20 kHz, etc.

This gives you the gain of the amp.  As MillerCarbon and many other have told you, it then is a straight forward calculation.

There are typical standards in many amp designs.   They call for an input voltage of x MV in order to produce max (before clipping) output of xxx watts per channel into an 8 ohm load.  So,  most audio amps have a set gain with the input sensitivity voltage of x mV to produce that max output.

This is electronics engineering 101.

The amp specs will tell you the amps gain based on the designed for input voltage to get that max power output.

The amp in question, has a gain switch that changes the amps gain.  They are either adding another gain stage in the amp via the switch to allow for lower input sensitivity or they are adjusting the input sensitivity and adding or removing a gain stage or just adjusting the input sensitivity.

either way, what MillerCarbon and some others have described is pretty accurate.

Its not rocket science, but it does require some knowledge of electronic design.

If you start with the required input voltage sensitivity, the required output power rating, the required load, input impedance requirement, output impedance requirements, the amp will have a calculated gain.

If you start with a set gain requirement and power output, into a set load, you still need to know what the input sensitivity is.

Pre-amps are pretty similar, except that there are standard pre-amp input voltage sensitivities, and max output voltage requirements (so you don't blow up your amp and speakers). 

anyway, I hope this didn't confuse you further.

enjoy