Hi Gang, I haven't been posting here a lot but I'm still hanging here almost daily.
Anyway I got a new to me Denon POA-2800 2x200 wpc amp with two speaker outputs to do a sort of bi-amp bi-wire setup. I'm running this from my Denon AVR-3805 into my Monitor Audio S6 towers. I could not believe the difference this made to my system especially for music. The sound is much stronger, more detailed and dynamic. I know there's plenty of debate if one amp sounds better than another but in this case it's huge! I know Mulester will be happy to know I get a big bad amp added to my system.
![Wink ;) ;)](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
Wow what a difference it made! Here's some pictures of the amp.
Are you running a 5.1 or 7.1 set up? If the former, did you try the 3805 bi-amping "trick" that's covered somewhere in these forums before buying external amplification?
I had done this "trick" a while ago, and I must have been one of the fortunate ones who did not get any hum in looping the main-pre-outs to an analogue input. The performance difference was noticeable immediately: tighter and punchier bass for want of better expressions.
Then I bought extra speakers for a 7.1 set up so I was no longer able to bi-amp. I liked the 7.1 so much more than 5.1 that I have been looking for a way to best introduce external amplification so I could bi-amp my fronts and yet retain 7.1
Unfortunately on the 3805 when you assign the Power Amps away from the surround back (which you have to do for the bi-amping "trick"), all surround back processing is lost, so it is impossible to use external amplification for the surround backs.
So if I wanted to bi-amp my mains, I would either have one of two options:
(1) buy a multi-channel amp (say 5@120W) and use two each for the L + R (bi-amp) and the fifth for the center.
(2) Buy a two channel amp and integrate it with the 3805 onboard amps to bi-amp the fronts only.
As funds are tight, option (1) seemed an expensive option: option (2) seemed a challenge to find an amp with the same output and gain.
One of the factors contributing to an improvement in SQ using bi-amp approach as opposed to plain external amplification via a two channel amp, is that with bi-amping the front drivers, the back EMF from each of the drivers is isolated from each other as the bass and tweeter drivers are attached to different amplifiers. (EDIT: Note having A-B speakers attached in a bi-wire set up is not bi-amping. A-B speakers share the same amplifier output so there is no bi-amping benefit to be gained be deploying a 2 channel amp with "2 sets of speaker terminals")
In the end I took a chance and purchased a secondhand Denon POA-T10 power amp, which on paper has the same power as the 3805, and the 3805 appears to have the same line output voltage as the AVC-10SE which the POA-T10 was partnered with.
So I set up the POA-T10 and 3805 to bi-amp the fronts using the 3805 amps to drive the tweeters and the T10 to drive the bass units.
To check whether using the Main pre-outs and T10 would work in terms of adding no delay and would be at the right level, I first used the T10 to drive both the tweeters and bass drivers and then ran the auto set up on the amp.
The delay (distance) was exactly the same as when using only the 3805's amps and the level was about 1db lower than the 3805 amps (i.e. the level in the "levels" set up screen was 1db lower, so the T10 was apparently only 1db louder). So I then bi-amped and re-ran the auto setup. Distances remained the same and the levels increased by just 0.5 db, presumably to compensate for the 1db less powerful 3805 amps. So a result! The T10 is a perfect match to bi-amp my fronts in tandem with the 3805! SO best of both worlds on the 3805: cost effective external amplification AND bi-amping AND 7.1 sound.