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#1
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Hash: SHA1 Hi folks, While looking at some 5.1- and 6.1-channels amplifier / receiver / speaker systems to be used with a new DVD recorder, I noticed that power is rated in the format: "xxx watts @ 1kHz @ .7% THD". Now, I will admit to being out of the technical end of the audio field for a number of years, but are ratings no longer based on " xxx watts RMS per channel @ 20 - 20,000 Hz @ .xx% THD" ? Looking at a couple of stand-alone receivers (no speakers included) found the same type of rating. My impression is that this is related to the use of switching power supplies in the new systems. Is it no longer a case of 'good specs' but rather 'how it sounds sitting on the shelf at BestBuy' ? Thanks for any opinions. - -- Ron n1zhi -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFA5s6xa9fyRcf4bIYRAkUqAKCQHtSRnJDxEmseilLIqD GgrKfCNgCfQI28 iMy+xUH9ywPAvNkxnRtwHbU= =6IeY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#2
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In article ,
Ron Cook wrote: Now, I will admit to being out of the technical end of the audio field for a number of years, but are ratings no longer based on " xxx watts RMS per channel @ 20 - 20,000 Hz @ .xx% THD" ? Some are. Different vendors prefer to mention their consistent, whole frequency power, and some prefer to mention their peak power at 1kHz. For home-theater-in-a-box systems, the target market is generally less informed, less interested in sound quality, and more interested in loudness, so whatever games you can play to pump up the perceived 'thump' will help you move more boxes. Looking at a couple of stand-alone receivers (no speakers included) found the same type of rating. Look at better receivers. At www.crutchfield.com, they track many specs on receivers, including RMS power and the frequency range for which they are rated at that power. They don't do that for home theater *systems*, though. Is it no longer a case of 'good specs' but rather 'how it sounds sitting on the shelf at BestBuy' ? I think it's still a matter of good specs, although some experimentation is necessary to figure out what's good enough and what's pouring money down the drain. -- Matthew Weigel the email address is real the contents of the post are not |
#3
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In article ,
Matthew Weigel wrote: In article , Ron Cook wrote: Now, I will admit to being out of the technical end of the audio field for a number of years, but are ratings no longer based on " xxx watts RMS per channel @ 20 - 20,000 Hz @ .xx% THD" ? Some are. In fact, I took a look at some of the cheapest sets online, and the $90 AMW home theater system at Circuit City.com has its power rated from 20-20k Hz. Not surprisingly, it doesn't come close in its power ratings to anything else, at 30Wx5, 15W for center. The next lowest power rating (by price, anyway) is Sony, 70Wx6, rated at 1kHz. There's probably a lot less difference between those two systems than Watts suggest. -- Matthew Weigel the email address is real the contents of the post are not |
#4
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So long as you are looking at a conventional design a good amplifier
specification to look at is weight. Yes, weight. The components that produce power and dissipate it have to be larger and heavier in proportion to the power produced. I refer mainly to the transformer, but also to the power supply, heat sinks, and chassis. Wylie Williams The Speaker and Stereo Store Saint Louis Missouri "Matthew Weigel" wrote in message ... In article , Matthew Weigel wrote: In article , Ron Cook wrote: Now, I will admit to being out of the technical end of the audio field for a number of years, but are ratings no longer based on " xxx watts RMS per channel @ 20 - 20,000 Hz @ .xx% THD" ? Some are. In fact, I took a look at some of the cheapest sets online, and the $90 AMW home theater system at Circuit City.com has its power rated from 20-20k Hz. Not surprisingly, it doesn't come close in its power ratings to anything else, at 30Wx5, 15W for center. The next lowest power rating (by price, anyway) is Sony, 70Wx6, rated at 1kHz. There's probably a lot less difference between those two systems than Watts suggest. -- Matthew Weigel the email address is real the contents of the post are not |
#5
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Hash: SHA1 Wylie Williams wrote: So long as you are looking at a conventional design a good amplifier specification to look at is weight. Yes, weight. The components that produce power and dissipate it have to be larger and heavier in proportion to the power produced. I refer mainly to the transformer, but also to the power supply, heat sinks, and chassis. Wylie Williams The Speaker and Stereo Store Saint Louis Missouri Agreed. (With regard to my original post: I decided to stay with a good solid stereo receiver which is also used with feeds from three computers. Oh, to return to the days when a power supply weighed as much as a house and was powered by half-inch copper lines fed directly from a local sub-station ![]() I actually had an opportunity to look at the input power requirement on a Panasonic 'home theatre' unit at BestBuy this morning. The product is advertised as 600 watts amongst six speakers (at 1 kHz), including the sub-woofer. It's input power requirement is 130 watts on a nominal 117 vac main. This reminds me strongly of the late 1960s and the early 1970s when I worked at one of the major hobbyist-consumer electronics stores. 'IHF' power, 'peak power', and a couple of others I don't recall allowed power 'ratings' of 100, 200 watts or higher with an input requirement of 50 watts. I do recall that the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and no-holds-barred testing and reviews put a stop to that. When the practice resumed I don't know. To be fair I have come across a couple of manufacturers (Onkyo was one) not afraid to list the actual ratings of units with 5.1 or 6.1 channels. When I'm ready for a full-blown multi-channel home theatre system I'll start looking at those products. - -- Ron n1zhi -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFA6cwga9fyRcf4bIYRAhfWAKCaDnm+rUiF1cIwqsj+Ss sWFT4ZRQCgjJ8+ 0N1oBquKY+YQGtObu3KmQWw= =NXk4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
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