
emorphien
Audioholic General
mine has enough watts that I wouldn't dare turn it up all the way... or anywhere close to that
ah seth i love this topic alot of people just dont understand that volume is a combination of thing,s efficiency is a key and peak rating,s are s**t.i went for 110db jbl,s for top and mid with 800 watts of brighed bryston power.per side.as a side thought, most recievers have 100watts but thats total per side if you have 4 speakers thats 50watt,s into each and less if you have a center channel.they take the 100 a side and splite it into 5 channels.but considering you dont use it at full power all the time it seems efficent, carver did something like this with thier m1.5 that "borrows"150watts from the other channel.ie 300 per side 300 headroom 150 borrowed =750 aside 1.5 total=1.500watts i think any company that sells this way is misleading the public.should be sold as m.3 although it has more headroom then most.Seth=L said:Awesome thread mindchild, I hate it when people do that too. "My stereo has 900 watts man". My response, " I have a 400 watt setup that will make two of your 900watt setups cry". People just don't understand that efficiency is key, and not only that but most amplifiers especially receivers are extremely overrated or just plain misleading.
I feel ya, all the way man.
Yes, I do understand. G-J hasn't posted in a long time. He has a red chiclet.Ampdog said:No exactly, Seth=L.
I hope I did not mislead. There are obviously many factors, each of which could come with a certain -er, latitude. I hope you also understood that I in no way compared the two amplifiers; simply used the "images" in front of me to illustrate a point.
Not wishing to belabour, but what scratched me was that to G-J it was of more importance to say how it sounded and how loud it is. So how does your system sound? Airy, excellent, laid-back, warm, cool, "man, its sends tickles down my spine" .... That means exactly - what? Etc.
I think you know what I mean!
get a 5 channel amp not 2.the 2 will put out 100watts per channel 1 channel driven,the 5 will put out 100watts 5 channels driven.as he says it wont be cheap.Seth=L said:The numbers most manufacturers give you don't mean a thing. I wouldn't be surprise if the power consumptions are skewed to meet the consumer's eye for an efficient or energy compliant piece of hardware. I have noticed the power consumptions fall sharply. Many think that the amps have become more efficient, while I feel they are just cutting corners to lower the consumers' costs. So a consumer wants a 100 watts perchannel and isn't willing to pay $1000 dollars to get it, so you get Sony receivers that are less than $400 that claim they have 100watts per channel. Word of advice, do not ever put budget receiver watts up against seperate amplifier's watts. Seperate amps that claim less power than their not so close relatives the budget receivers will most likely beat them out every time.
Thule amp:
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Kenwood receiver:
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Each one claims to have 100 watts per channel 5 channels. Which one do you think really has 100 watts x 5 channels, well you tell me?
Not sure that I understand completelydave1490 said:get a 5 channel amp not 2.the 2 will put out 100watts per channel 1 channel driven,the 5 will put out 100watts 5 channels driven.as he says it wont be cheap.
I don't either.Seth=L said:Not sure that I understand completely![]()
emorphien said:I don't either.
Ok, add me to the list of those that are confused. A 2 channel signal is 'split' into 5.1 channels by a matrix decoder like PLII. What does that have to do with having a 5 channel amp vs having a 2 channel amp that will only amplify the front channels?dave1490 said:just read how 2 channels are split into 5.a 5 channel dont do that,their about 2.5x more powerfull.
Love your website,i was looking at the pink floyd poster on your wall & it reminded me that i bought the same poster with the intention of getting it framed but it ended up in the attic with the rest of my unused crap,i gotta dig that puppy out & get it framed.Haoleb said:When someone ask's me how many watts the stereo is... I just smile and say, Enough![]()
a watt is a watt, it does not matter if it's in your car or house.NYyankeeboi said:Am I correct in assuming then that wattage in home audio different in car audio systems?
Is it something to do with 12 v instead of 120 v? not sure because in my car I run 1100 watts to my subs, and 450 watts to my interior speakers.
Granted, it sounds really good, but I doubt this would fill my house the way 600 watts do with my home system.
Well perhaps he's asking it as a perception of how much power is being used. Which could depend on impedance or volts. 100 watts for a 2 ohm setup isn't the same as saying 100 watts for a 8 ohm setup.no. 5 said:a watt is a watt, it does not matter if it's in your car or house.
oh, yes... did'nt really think of that.emorphien said:Well perhaps he's asking it as a perception of how much power is being used. Which could depend on impedance or volts.
yeah, that would be a good sized voltage difference, for one thing.emorphien said:100 watts for a 2 ohm setup isn't the same as saying 100 watts for a 8 ohm setup.
i agree with everything you said.but i from the old school were continuse power was the norm and each signal had a amp.MDS said:Sorry Dave, I still don't understand your rant but I'll say this, you are seriously mistaken.
- First of all, real music doesn't EVER drive all channels at the same time.
- Second, most receivers are rated driving 2 channels at the same time, not one.
- No you do not sum the per channel rating. Only 'boombox' type systems rate that way - it's called Peak Music Power Output (PMPO) and yes that is misleading.
Most importantly people are obsessed with large numbers and automatically think 200 wpc will sound better than a receiver or amp rated less. The reality is that the receiver/amp will almost NEVER be required to deliver that much power. Your 200 wpc amp will be delivering a few watts to your speakers the vast majority of the time - it's only the transients that require a lot of power and that only comes into play if you have a huge room and are listening at extremely loud levels. Even still they are brief moments in time.
By the 'more is better' logic everyone should buy Pro amps capable of delivering 500 wpc even though it will rarely be called upon to supply more than a dozen watts.