Hi Guys,
I am familiar with standard low impedance (4 & 8 ohm) amplifiers but not so much with 70/100V.
I have been reading as much as I can find about the. The speaker end seams pretty straight forward and I understand the concept, and their limitations, but I am not 100% around the amplifier side of things as the information is limited and the info I have found is not very detailed. The key components of an amplifier I guess are likely the same if not very close between the two amps, amplifier circuit along with filter caps, but when converting the normal low impedance speaker output to 100v, is it a simple matter of using a PA line transformer in reverse? So the amp is connected to the Low Impedance side of the transformer and the output of the transformer is then connected to the high impedance (see the picture below).
I just am having trouble believing it would be something this simple, things rarely are. I understand that I cannot exceed the output power of the transformer on the amplifier unlike your normal low impedance where you cannot go below due to the danger of blowing your speakers if the volume is increased.
Any thoughts or information is welcomed with open ears (and eyes).
Thanks,
Josh