Can someone explain db sensitivity?


Can someone explain speaker db sensitivity,What it means and what is considered good? Thanks
jcb2000
Generally speaking, sensitivity is measured by driving one watt through the speaker and measuring the relative volume from one meter away. The "loudness" is measured with a SPL meter and indicates how sensitive the speaker is. More efficient designs will have 90+ specs and are easy to drive, making pretty well any amplifier suitable. The most efficient speakers are horn speakers, like the Klipsch's. From there, it's all over the map, whether the design is bookshelf, floorstanders, or panels. Bottom line, find a speaker you like and then find the right amp to drive it.
The higher the sensitivity, the louder a speaker will play with the same input. This loudness is measured in dB. A difference of 3 dB is twice as loud. So a 90dB speaker will play twice as loud as an 87dB speaker with the same input.

The "what is good" question is debatable. Everthing else being equal, a higher sensitivity is better because the amp doesn't have to work as hard to produce the sound level you want.

However, some will say that in order to achieve this high efficiency, compromises must be made in the speaker design so lower efficiency speakers and more powerful amps are the way to go. Others will argue that low power amps sound better than high power amps so higher efficiency speakers and less powerful amps are the way to go.
Note to Herman: A difference of 3 db is twice the power, not twice the loudness. In order to double the loudness you need 10 times the power which is 10db. You need to send twice as much power to the 87 db speaker to achive the same loudness as the 90db speaker.
Note to Aragain. I beg to differ. I believe you are confusing percieved loudness as measured in dB with amplifier power, which is also measured in dB although they are two different things. The 90dB versus 87dB is the output loudness from the speaker, not the input power to the speaker from the amplifier.

The general rule, as you correctly state, is that to double the loudness from a particular speaker, you need to provide it with 10 times more power. Example: you are listening to an amplifier that is delivering one watt to the speaker. To make it sound twice as loud, it would have to deliver ten watts.

Twice as loud is a change of 3dB in loudness, not in amplifier input power. You need to send ten times (10dB) more power to the 87dB speaker to get the same loudness as the 90dB, not twice as much as you state.
Ok, Herman - I'm willing to retract my post although I have never seen it explained as you have stated.

So, if I understand what you are saying, you would need 1000 times the power to an 87db speaker to get the same loudness as a 96db speaker? This means it would take a 3000 watt ss amp on an 87db speaker to match the volume of a 3 watt 2A3 tube on the 96db speaker. Is this correct?

Thanks
- A