R
RMK!
Guest
I just upgraded my main speakers and would like to make sure that I am doing them justice from a power perspective. Everyone from the sales person who sold them to me to reviews of the speakers to other owner’s comments lead me to believe that I have purchased speakers that are “power hungry”. The specs on the speakers are:
Monitor Audio GR60
Frequency Response +/- 3dB 28Hz-30KHZ
Sensitivity (1W@1M) 90dB
Nominal Impedance (Ohms) 6
Power Handling RMS (W) 200
Is the 3805 capable of driving these speakers? If not, I am not opposed to purchasing a power amplifier to address this. I thought the Audioholics 3805 review gave me a quick and inexpensive way to address the power issue.
Several others and I have done the 3805 bi-amping and have had mixed results. In response to my questions about this, forum members have referred to this as “ghetto amping” and a “waste of wire” and recommended a separate power amp. There have been comments made about differences in the quality of the 3805 internal amps inferring that the zone 2&3 amps are inferior to the main zone amp but no data was presented to backup this assertion. Interestingly, there has been no comment from the review author on this subject nor was this addressed in the review. The only down side mentioned in the review was a reported but not verified low frequency hum generated by increasing the bass level several db’s.
I have to wonder if Clint still stands behind his “qualified” 3805 bi-amping recommendation and claim of 240 (2 X 120) watts power to the fronts (where you need it most) giving an additional 3dB headroom. It would be nice to hear a definitive statement as to the effectiveness of this procedure.
I understand that room acoustics and speaker positioning have a large effect on how the speakers sound and I am working on that but I would also like to get to the bottom of the bi-amping mystery. Is passive bi-amping pointless? Does this provide the 240 watts and 3dB additional headroom?
Sorry to keep carping on this, but before I spend $2K on 200 watts of power I’d like to know that what I already have cannot provide it.
Monitor Audio GR60
Frequency Response +/- 3dB 28Hz-30KHZ
Sensitivity (1W@1M) 90dB
Nominal Impedance (Ohms) 6
Power Handling RMS (W) 200
Is the 3805 capable of driving these speakers? If not, I am not opposed to purchasing a power amplifier to address this. I thought the Audioholics 3805 review gave me a quick and inexpensive way to address the power issue.
Several others and I have done the 3805 bi-amping and have had mixed results. In response to my questions about this, forum members have referred to this as “ghetto amping” and a “waste of wire” and recommended a separate power amp. There have been comments made about differences in the quality of the 3805 internal amps inferring that the zone 2&3 amps are inferior to the main zone amp but no data was presented to backup this assertion. Interestingly, there has been no comment from the review author on this subject nor was this addressed in the review. The only down side mentioned in the review was a reported but not verified low frequency hum generated by increasing the bass level several db’s.
I have to wonder if Clint still stands behind his “qualified” 3805 bi-amping recommendation and claim of 240 (2 X 120) watts power to the fronts (where you need it most) giving an additional 3dB headroom. It would be nice to hear a definitive statement as to the effectiveness of this procedure.
I understand that room acoustics and speaker positioning have a large effect on how the speakers sound and I am working on that but I would also like to get to the bottom of the bi-amping mystery. Is passive bi-amping pointless? Does this provide the 240 watts and 3dB additional headroom?
Sorry to keep carping on this, but before I spend $2K on 200 watts of power I’d like to know that what I already have cannot provide it.