Speaker Cable Loss Calculator

Speaker cable resistance causes power loss between the amplifier and loudspeaker, reducing output level and degrading damping factor. SonaVyx calculates insertion loss in decibels for any combination of AWG wire gauge, cable length, and speaker impedance, helping you select the correct cable gauge to keep losses below the audible threshold of 0.5 dB for professional installations.

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Measure the actual impact of cable loss on your system frequency response.

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Technical Specifications

ParameterValueStandard
Wire GaugesAWG 8 through AWG 24ASTM B258
Cable Length1 - 500 meters (3 - 1640 ft)Round-trip calculation
Speaker Impedance2 - 32 ohmsNominal impedance
Loss FormulaL = 10 * log10(1 - R_cable/R_load)Power loss in dB
Resistance DataPer ASTM B258 at 20 CCopper conductor
Damping FactorDF = R_load / R_cableAmplifier control
Professional Threshold< 0.5 dB total lossIndustry best practice

How to Calculate Cable Loss

1

Enter Cable Parameters

Input the wire gauge (AWG number), total cable length (one-way distance from amplifier to speaker), and the nominal speaker impedance. The calculator accounts for both conductors (there and back), so enter the one-way distance only.

2

Review Power Loss

The calculator displays total cable resistance, power loss in dB, percentage of power delivered to the speaker, and effective damping factor. For professional installations, total loss should be below 0.5 dB. For critical monitoring, keep it below 0.25 dB.

3

Compare Wire Gauges

Try different AWG values to find the most cost-effective gauge that meets your loss target. Doubling the wire cross-section (e.g., AWG 14 to AWG 11) halves the resistance. Going from AWG 14 to AWG 12 reduces resistance by approximately 37%.

4

Check Damping Factor

Damping factor measures how well the amplifier controls speaker cone motion. Cable resistance reduces the effective damping factor. A damping factor above 20 is adequate for most applications. Below 10 causes audible bass looseness, particularly with ported enclosures.

Understanding Speaker Cable Loss

Speaker cables carry high-current, low-voltage audio signals from amplifiers to loudspeakers. Unlike line-level signals (which carry milliwatts), speaker-level signals carry watts to hundreds of watts. At these power levels, even modest cable resistance causes measurable power loss. The relationship is governed by the voltage divider formed between the cable resistance and the speaker impedance.

AWG Wire Gauge and Resistance

The American Wire Gauge (AWG) system defines conductor sizes on a logarithmic scale. AWG 10 has a cross-section of 5.26 mm2 with a resistance of 3.28 ohms per kilometer. AWG 14 has 2.08 mm2 and 8.28 ohms/km. AWG 18 has 0.82 mm2 and 20.9 ohms/km. Every 3-gauge decrease approximately halves the cross-section and doubles the resistance. For speaker cables, lower AWG numbers (thicker wire) mean less loss.

Damping Factor Degradation

Modern amplifiers achieve damping factors above 500, meaning their output impedance is less than 0.016 ohms for an 8-ohm load. This allows tight control of the speaker cone, particularly at the resonant frequency where overshoot would otherwise cause boomy bass. However, a 30-meter run of AWG 14 cable adds 0.5 ohms, reducing the effective damping factor to 16. The speaker hears the amplifier through a series resistor that undermines its ability to control cone motion.

Practical Guidelines

The rule of thumb is that total cable resistance should not exceed 5% of the speaker impedance for professional applications. For an 8-ohm speaker, this means maximum 0.4 ohms total cable resistance (0.2 ohms per conductor). For a 4-ohm speaker, the limit halves to 0.2 ohms total. Always calculate based on the minimum impedance the speaker presents, not the nominal rating, as many speakers dip well below their nominal impedance at certain frequencies.

Cable Loss Calculator Comparison

FeatureSonaVyxSmaart v9REWOSM
Cable loss calculationYes (AWG 8-24)NoNoNo
Damping factorYesNoNoNo
Multi-gauge compareYesNoNoNo
Browser-basedYesNoNoNo
Metric + imperialYesN/AN/AN/A
PriceFree$898FreeFree

Frequently Asked Questions

Related Tools & Resources

Standards References

  • ASTM B258 — Standard specification for standard nominal diameters and cross-sectional areas of AWG sizes
  • IEC 60268-5:2003 — Sound system equipment: Loudspeakers (impedance specifications)
  • NEC Article 725 — Class 2 and Class 3 remote-control, signaling, and power-limited circuits (cable ratings)