When you turn down or up the volume on devices with either a wheel or button, what actually happens that allows it to sound quieter or louder?

1.37K views

When you turn down or up the volume on devices with either a wheel or button, what actually happens that allows it to sound quieter or louder?

In: Technology

24 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

A system consists of some signal source (tape player, radio etc), usually a preamp, an amplifier and a speaker.

The volume control sits between the preamp and the amplifier. The preamp produces a signal that is (generally) about 1 volt. The volume control has a long resistor, with a wiper that makes contact with the resistor at some point along its length. The preamp output is connected to one end of the resistor, and the other end is attached to the 0 volts point (‘ground’). The wiper is connected to the input of the main amp, which produces a signal with the voltage and power needed to drive the speaker.

When the volume is high, the wiper attaches to the resistor right beside the input. So the full 1volt signal appears at the input of the main amp. When the volume is fully down, it the wiper attaches to the resistor right down at the ground point – there’s no voltage there, as it is at 0 volts, so the main amp sees no signal and you get nothing out.

Anywhere between that, the wiper contacts the resistor somewhere along it’s length, and so the main amp sees somewhere between the full 1v signal and nothing, controlling the volume.

You are viewing 1 out of 24 answers, click here to view all answers.