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Interactive Guide

Speakers & Loads

The connection between amplifier and loudspeaker is the most underappreciated link in the audio chain. Impedance interaction, damping, and speaker efficiency fundamentally shape the sound of tube amplifiers.

01 — The Interface

The Amplifier-Speaker Interface

Where output impedance meets speaker impedance.

An amplifier is not a perfect voltage source. It has an output impedance (Zout) that forms a voltage divider with the speaker impedance (Zload). The voltage actually delivered to the speaker is:

V_spk = V_src × Z_load / (Z_load + Z_out)

Solid-state: Zout < 0.1Ω typical. The voltage divider is negligible — the speaker sees essentially the full voltage regardless of its impedance. The amp behaves as a near-ideal voltage source.

Tubes (through transformer): Zout = 1–8Ω typical. The voltage divider is no longer negligible. If speaker impedance varies with frequency (and it always does), the delivered voltage varies too. The amp behaves partly as a current source.

This fundamental difference explains why the same speaker sounds different when driven by a transistor amp versus a tube amp. Speaker impedance isnever constant — it varies dramatically with frequency, with resonance peaks and inductive rise. The impedance curve matters far more than the nominal rating.

02 — Damping Factor

Damping Factor

How tightly the amplifier controls the speaker cone.

DF = Z_load / Z_out

The damping factor (DF) quantifies how well the amplifier controls the speaker. When the signal stops, the cone keeps moving due to inertia. An amp with high DF effectively short-circuits the speaker's back-EMF, braking the cone quickly.

Solid-state: DF > 100 (often 200–500). Overdamped. Tight, controlled, sometimes "dry" bass.

PP tubes with NFB: DF = 5–20. Critically damped to slightly underdamped. Full, natural bass.

SET tubes (no NFB): DF = 2–5. Underdamped. Warm, "loose" bass. Many prefer this character with high-efficiency speakers.

Neither is "correct" — it is a design choice. Negative feedback (NFB) increases DF by reducing Zout.

Amp TypeZoutDF (8Ω)Bass Character
Solid-state0.02-0.1Ω80-400Tight, controlled
PP + heavy NFB0.4-1Ω8-20Firm, natural
PP + light NFB1-3Ω3-8Full, warm
SET (300B)2-4Ω2-4Warm, loose
SET (45/2A3)3-8Ω1-3Very warm, romantic
03 — Speaker Impedance

Speaker Impedance — The Real Picture

Nominal impedance is the minimum, not the average.

An "8Ω" speaker is not an 8Ω resistor. The nominal value (4Ω, 8Ω, 16Ω) represents approximately the minimum of the impedance curve, not the average. Real impedance varies dramatically with frequency:

Resonance peak (Fs): At the speaker's resonance frequency (typically 30–100Hz for a woofer), impedance can rise to 20–50Ω or more.

Minimum: Just above Fs, impedance drops back toward the nominal value. This is the DC resistance of the voice coil (Re) plus a small margin.

HF rise: Above 1–2kHz, voice coil inductance causes impedance to rise. At 10kHz, an "8Ω" speaker may present 20–30Ω.

With a solid-state amp (Zout ≈ 0), these variations don't affect delivered voltage. With a tube amp (Zout > 1Ω), the frequency response is directly modulated by the impedance curve. A Zobel network (R + C in parallel with the speaker) can compensate for inductive rise.

Z_zobel: R = Z_nominal, C = L_e / R²
04 — Crossovers

Crossover Networks

How amplifier output impedance affects crossover behavior.

Passive crossovers (series/parallel types) are designed assuming a 0Ω source impedance. With a tube amp, the higher Zout alters crossover behavior:

Reduced slopes: A 2nd-order filter (12dB/octave) may behave like a 1st-order (6dB/oct) when Zout is significant. The amp's Zout adds in series with the filter components.

1st order (6dB/oct): Most tube-friendly. A capacitor for the high-pass, an inductor for the low-pass. Little sensitivity to Zout.

Higher orders: Designed for Zout ≈ 0, they may misbehave with tubes. The solution: bi-amping or active crossovers before the power amp.

Crossover Component Calculator
Fc3.0kHz
Z load8Ω
C_hp = 1 / (2π · Fc · Z)   |   L_lp = Z / (2π · Fc)
C (1st)6.63µF
L (1st)0.42mH
C (2nd BW)4.69µF
L (2nd BW)0.60mH
Tip: For tube amps, prefer 1st-order crossovers. Their gentle 6dB/oct slope is least affected by amplifier output impedance, and they preserve phase coherence between drivers.
05 — Speaker Selection

Speaker Selection for Tube Amps

High efficiency is the key to great tube amp performance.

Speaker sensitivity specifies the SPL produced by 1W of input at 1m distance. It is the single most important parameter for tube amp matching:

SET (2–8W): 93dB+ sensitivity required, 95dB+ ideal. Full-range drivers (Lowther, Fostex, Tang Band), horn-loaded (Klipsch, Altec).

PP (15–40W): 90dB+ sensitivity recommended. Efficient multi-way (Klipsch Heresy, DeVore), vintage (JBL, Tannoy Dual Concentric).

Avoid: Modern low-sensitivity designs (<86dB) built for 100W+ solid-state amps. They require power that most tube amps cannot deliver.

TypeSensitivityBest AmpExamples
Full-range (small)88-93 dBSET 2-8WFostex FE206En, Tang Band W8
Full-range (large)95-100 dBSET 2-5WLowther PM6A, Feastrex
Horn-loaded98-108 dBSET 2-8WKlipsch La Scala, Avantgarde
Efficient multi-way94-98 dBPP Class A 15-30WKlipsch Heresy, DeVore O/96
Open baffle92-98 dBSET/PP 5-20WSpatial Audio M3
Compression driver105-115 dBSET 0.5-3WJBL 2440, Altec 288, TAD
06 — Transformer Taps

Transformer Taps & Impedance Matching

Matching the output transformer to the speaker load.

Output transformers typically offer taps for 4Ω, 8Ω, and 16Ω. The basic rule: use the tap closest to the speaker's nominal impedance.

The turns ratio (N): The impedance seen by the tubes at the primary is Zp = N² × Zload. Each secondary tap adjusts the ratio to maintain the correct primary load.

Intentional mismatch: Some builders use a 4Ω speaker on the 8Ω tap to double the reflected primary impedance. This reduces maximum power but can favorably alter the distortion character. It is common in guitar amps.

Multi-driver systems: Parallel wiring halves impedance (2×8Ω parallel = 4Ω), series doubles it (2×8Ω series = 16Ω). Choose the combination matching an available tap.

Z_primary = N² × Z_secondary
Z_parallel = (Z1 × Z2) / (Z1 + Z2)
SpeakerBest TapMismatch Effect
Ideal match
4Ω on 8Ω tap↓ power, ↑ Zp, softer clip
Ideal match
8Ω on 4Ω tap↑ power attempt, risk OT saturation
16Ω16ΩIdeal match
2×8Ω parallel4Ω total → 4Ω tap
2×8Ω series16Ω16Ω total → 16Ω tap
07 — Measurements

Practical Measurements

How to measure your amp’s output impedance and your speaker’s impedance curve.

Measuring Zout (two-resistor method):

1. Feed a 1kHz sine wave into the amplifier.

2. Measure the open-circuit output voltage (V_open) with no load connected.

3. Connect a known load resistor (R_load, typically 8Ω). Measure the loaded voltage (V_load).

4. Calculate:

Z_out = R_load × (V_open / V_load − 1)

Measuring speaker impedance curve: Use a sweep generator (20Hz–20kHz) and a voltmeter. Place a known series resistor (R_series, e.g. 100Ω) between the generator and speaker. Measure the voltage across the speaker (V_spk) and total voltage (V_gen) at each frequency. Speaker impedance is Z = R_series × V_spk / (V_gen − V_spk).

Interpreting results: A good amp/speaker match shows an impedance curve without extreme dips (<3Ω) and sufficient sensitivity for the available wattage. If the resonance peak is very high (>5× nominal), a Zobel network may be beneficial.

Interactive — Calculator

Amp-Speaker Compatibility

Check if your amplifier and speaker are well matched.

Power8.00W
Zout2.50Ω
Sensitivity93dB
Speaker Z8Ω
Room20
Max SPL102.0dB
Damping Factor3.2
Headroom17.0dB
In-room SPL102.0dB
Excellent Match Excellent match — plenty of headroom and good damping.
Try this: Set power to 3W and sensitivity to 86dB to see why low-power SET amps struggle with modern bookshelf speakers. Then raise sensitivity to 97dB — notice the dramatic improvement in headroom.
Interactive — Visualizer

Impedance Curve & Frequency Response

See how amplifier Zout changes the frequency response through impedance interaction.

Zout2.00Ω
Damping Factor4.0
Bass boost at Fs0.9dB
HF boost at 10kHz1.6dB
Observe: At Zout = 0.01Ω (solid-state), the green frequency response line is flat. Increase Zout to 4Ω (typical SET) and watch the response develop peaks at the resonance frequency and at high frequencies. This is the signature sound of tube amplifiers interacting with real speaker loads.
Key Relationships
DF = Z_load / Z_out
SPL = Sens. + 10·log(P)
V_spk = V_src × Z_load / (Z_load + Z_out)
Z_out = R_load × (V_open/V_load − 1)
C_hp = 1 / (2π · Fc · Z)
Z_primary = N² × Z_secondary
Remember: The amplifier-speaker interface is a partnership, not a specification sheet. A well-chosen high-efficiency speaker with a modest tube amp can outperform a powerful solid-state driving a difficult load. Match wisely, measure carefully, and trust your ears.
Quiz de synthèse

Test Your Knowledge

Validate your understanding of the amplifier-speaker interface.

Question 1 / 7

Why does the same speaker sound different with a tube amp versus a solid-state amp?

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