
Mika75
Audioholic
The graphic on the faceplate is much nicer I guess... Ohh, and if ur out there listening Uli - Use a silent variable speed fan on the EP series !!So what is the difference between the 2500 and the 4000?
The graphic on the faceplate is much nicer I guess... Ohh, and if ur out there listening Uli - Use a silent variable speed fan on the EP series !!So what is the difference between the 2500 and the 4000?
Replacing the fan is very easy to do. And I believe has been linked in this post already.@Mika75
I've Just bought an EP1500... It's very noisy, too much! The problem is that new models should already have the variable speed fan.
Now I need another to drive a special subwoofer(very special subwoofer, powerful than a DD18and Its components coast only 700€), I was looking for the 2500...
So, I understand that the EP4000 can seems the same, but I really can't understand why Behringer shuold sell the same amp with two different names
Maybe there is one little difference (for example a less noisy fan)...I DON'T KNOW
http://forums.audioholics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=45137Yes I know....but I've lots of reasons to don't do it... A part that I'm in Italy and I don't know where to find the components, second the noise decrease, that if I remember well in the thread was 3dB... you know... 3dB is not an impressive resultand there is the risk to invaid the guarantee opening the case and to damage the amp cause sometimes I listen to very very hight volumes
What do you think about the QSC RMX2450, i heard is the same amp with better components. It costs perhaps 200€ more, is it a good choice?
The QSC RMX is what Behringer knocked off to build the EP series. The fan isn't quiet though. Look at Crest Audio. My CC series amps are silent. They build fantastic amplifiers too. QSC makes a great amp too, but the RMX isn't really quiet if that is an issue.Yes I know....but I've lots of reasons to don't do it... A part that I'm in Italy and I don't know where to find the components, second the noise decrease, that if I remember well in the thread was 3dB... you know... 3dB is not an impressive resultand there is the risk to invaid the guarantee opening the case and to damage the amp cause sometimes I listen to very very hight volumes
What do you think about the QSC RMX2450, i heard is the same amp with better components. It costs perhaps 200€ more, is it a good choice?
8dB I'm sorry,
Nah, it'll be fine.8dB I'm sorry,much better!
One more question...I read somewhere that the 2500 has some problem to drive 4Ohm load bridged (that is like 2Ohm per channel I think), is it true? cause i need one for a 1500w @4Ohm subwoofer
I assume/believe he read that, he was probably reading that a lot of professional users of them have had problems running 4-ohm and 2-ohm bridged loads because the EPs overheat. But for a home subwoofer it should be fine.2 x 1,200 Watts into 2 Ohms or 2,400 Watts into 4 Ohms bridged mono operation.![]()
What are you driving that needs 1500w? Sealed JL Audio8dB I'm sorry,much better!
One more question...I read somewhere that the 2500 has some problem to drive 4Ohm load bridged (that is like 2Ohm per channel I think), is it true? cause i need one for a 1500w @4Ohm subwoofer
he was probably reading that a lot of professional users of them have had problems running 4-ohm and 2-ohm bridged loads because the EPs overheat.
I would personally blame the operators on this overheating in the pro scene. The popular way to run a bass cabinet (standard 2x18" in this country) is to use one amp to power one cabinet. The EP2500 will output 2000w before exhibiting heat issues.I assume/believe he read that, he was probably reading that a lot of professional users of them have had problems running 4-ohm and 2-ohm bridged loads because the EPs overheat. But for a home subwoofer it should be fine.
It isn't the same amp, It looks similar but has different power ratings and options.@Mika75
I've Just bought an EP1500... It's very noisy, too much! The problem is that new models should already have the variable speed fan.
Now I need another to drive a special subwoofer(very special subwoofer, powerful than a DD18and Its components coast only 700€), I was looking for the 2500...
So, I understand that the EP4000 can seems the same, but I really can't understand why Behringer shuold sell the same amp with two different names
Maybe there is one little difference (for example a less noisy fan)...I DON'T KNOW
Well, amps usually have heat problems when being run too hard / having the limiter threshold set to soft. Some do a better job than others of saving themselves, but, its not fair to compare amplifiers that costs twice as much or more to a budget amplifier. Crown XTi's and Macrotechs have good thermal protection, the QSCs and Crests are excellent at that. These also do a better job of saving the speaker (rapid/ramping gain protection, etc.) But they also cost more, so, *shrug*I would personally blame the operators on this overheating in the pro scene. The popular way to run a bass cabinet (standard 2x18" in this country) is to use one amp to power one cabinet. The EP2500 will output 2000w before exhibiting heat issues.
That's 1000w to each driver. To my knowledge, there is no single 18" that I know of that will use 1000w. I say use, rather than take. I've used a TON of 18's. Beyma, RCF, B&C, Eminence, PD, P.Audio, Selenium, etc.. The driver will most likely go into power compression far before 1000w. There's no reason to use more power than what's actually being used by the driver. You want it to get louder, get more cabinets.
Don't clip them and they will serve you well. That should be obvious with any power amp.
They're better than crown k2's. That should be enough.