I wish I had time to measure more amps but my test procedures are pretty consistent from product to product per my standard I use here:
https://www.audioholics.com/audio-amplifier/basic-amplifier-measurement-techniques
I know, and have read the linked article more than once. I actually meant for example you didn't always measure IMD, and I found the SNR section could be made a little clearer, so people (like me
) don't have to assume things.
Example:
The RR2150 exhibited a low noise floor. At 1 watt I measured 83dB (A-weighted) and 76dB with no filter engaged. The relatively small difference between A-wt and un-weighed measurements indicates that out of band residual noise residuals are low. At rated power, I measured 103dB (A-wt).
With the receiver in Direct mode bypassing the DSP and 100mVin, and 1 Vrms output, the AVR-X5200W exhibited an excellent SNR of 95dB with the AES17 filter engaged. With no filter, it dropped down to 88dB, which is still an excellent figure. Because of the digital processing and clocks, with DSP engaged, the noise floor went up to 77dB with no filter engaged. Overall, these are very good results. The preamp is quiet when it should be.
The AVR-X3300W preamp output exhibited a low noise floor (90dB) unweighted with 100mV input drive.
So it seems you measured the RR2150 at the power amp output and the Denons at the pre-outs? If so, then I have the following questions:
- For AVRs, did you always measure in Direct mode at the minimum, and with DSP only in some cases?
- Did you always use 100 mV in, or whatever it needs to obtain 1 Vrms at the pre-out?
- In addition to measuring SN or the prepro section, why wouldn't you measure the overall SNR of AVRs from input to speaker output as well, so we can compare SNRs of AVRs (when used as prepro only) to prepros, and also AVR to prepro/power amp combos.
It will be great if, for AVR, receivers and integrated amps, we can see the SNR values for:
- Preamp input to preamp output (e.g. 100 mV in, 1 Vrms out).
- Preamp input to speaker output (e.g. 10mVin, 1 W out, 100mVin, 100 W, or rated output)
Sorry about asking so many questions, I do appreciate the fact that the AH test lab has already gone way over and above anyone else in the business, in providing so much valuable information and making it publicly available, for free. Thanks again for the great work!