Explanation of "channels" for Amplifiers

W

wsp63002

Audiophyte
Can someone give me a high level explanation about what a channel is as its associated to an amplifier? Some have 2, others have 8; I have two floor speakers, one center, and one sub - I would like to add an amplifier to this home system. Any advice would certainly be appreciated.

Thank you.

-abe
HK AVR354
Bose 301
BA Center
BA Sub
 
its phillip

its phillip

Audioholic Ninja
Each speaker has it's own channel.

Center = 1 channel
Left Main = 1 channel
Right Main = 1 channel
Left Surround = 1 channel
Right Surround = 1 channel
Subwoofer = .1 channel (the LFE channel)
 
BoredSysAdmin

BoredSysAdmin

Audioholic Slumlord
Most modern consumer subwoofers have built in amplifier (1 channel) so they don't require external amplification.
Adding amplifier could be right on wrong idea depends on your setup and requirements...
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
Can someone give me a high level explanation about what a channel is as its associated to an amplifier? Some have 2, others have 8; I have two floor speakers, one center, and one sub - I would like to add an amplifier to this home system.
Do you want an amplifier or do you want an A/V receiver?

Most people want an A/V receiver. This will take your audio from multiple sources, such as a Blu-ray Disc player, game console, and cable box, and decode digital audio (from HDMI, etc.) and then includes the amplification for the speakers inside of it.

When you hear that a amplifier has 8 channels, it means that it can power up to 8 separate items individually. Kind of like if your cable box has 10 channels, it means you can watch 10 individual shows.

Most A/V surround receivers are 5.1 or 7.1 which means they have power to run 5 or 7 different channels.

Does 1 speaker = 1 channel?

For the point of this introduction we will say yes. In reality, you can power multiple speakers off a single channel, but this would NOT be typical from a typical home theater setup. Likewise, there are times when you want to dedicate two channels to one speaker. Once again, this is not typical and not really worth discussing for a entry level setup.

What matters to you:
You have a left, center, and right speaker which needs amplification.

Your subwoofer (make? model?) should have a built in amplifier as well. If not, it may not be worth using... Or, you may want to get a specifically dedicated subwoofer amplifier for it.

If your subwoofer is amplifier, the most typical solution is to just add a surround A/V receiver to your setup and go from there!
 

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