Apologies if this has been asked before - I've been out of the audio market for a while.. (I still have my Carver TX-11 tuner and AR turntable....)
I'm setting up a new system, mostly for classical and jazz music, but it will also support the occasional DVD or TV show.
Most of the AV systems I have been looking at have 7 power outputs, so 7 power amps. The system I'm planning on setting up will start with 2 front channels plus subwoofer, and maybe a center channel in the future if I feel like it would be useful. No plans for rear or surround speakers.
So if I buy a 7.1 AV receiver, am I throwing money away - will 5 of the amps be sitting idle? Or a better question, if I use only two front speakers can I combine amps to increase the power to those two??
thanks,
First off let's consider your main question, "will the amps your not using just go to waste?"
Will they sit idle...yes
Will it be a waste... Maybe not, depends on your speakers, one thing to remember is that modern day AVR's, while they have multiple amp channels, they share one single power supply for those amps, so by not drawing power from multiple channels at once, it leaves more power available for the channels you are using.
Don't forget, amps don't push power, speakers draw power, so the higher the demand from those individual speakers (in either impedance or in volume/db's) The more power is needed and the power is derived from the power supply, not the amp, the amps are rated and built according to the power supply that will be available to them.
Example: an AVR capable of 100w all channels driven, will often be capable of 130+ watts with only 2 channels driven.
Plus, if your thinking about adding a Center speaker in the future, then you've used 3 of those amp channels, plus most modern AVR's come with at least 2 zones, that you could possibly use for future areas in your home.
As far as combining Amps, NO, you can't simply combine amps that would technically be bridging and no current mainstream AVRs allow you to do that.