JayGilb
Major Contributor
Does the manufacturer design any of the internal modules or are they purchased from a vendor and installed in the chassis ?
Something for everyone to remember. Unless a buyer is looking for a very tiny machine shop welder, 99% of the owners will never come close to utilizing the total power of this amp. Or, they will be doing hearing aid commercials in a month!Indeed.
When playing music even with 6x600W peaks the average drawn current would be far, far below the 16A average.
As an electrician, I’d be pretty surprised if someone actually managed to trip a house breaker with one of these, but there’s firsts for everything.
As for the amplifier, these things are the bees knees. I use a 6 channel one he made for me that’s 2x500, 2x250 and 2x125 for my active 3 way fronts and it works perfectly and silently. No class AB transformer hum, no weight, much less heat, no power supply harmonics spraying across the FFT graphs, no hiss, no complaints.
That's kinda tough without knowing what wall issues there are as a new home run will need to be pulled.McFly, as an electrician, what is a general average guess at the approximate cost to have an electrician come and install or convert a 120 to a 240 wall plug? I have always wondered at what the cost range would be. $300 to $400? More? Thanks for any info.
True, with material with 10DB headroom that would be 60watts a channel. Hopefully the PSU can handle the peaks and recharge without full current draw. I have an amp that's 200watts. Using a scope for 60V p-p peaks the amps power meter only measures 20watts. Using 95db sens speakers that's very loud. I rarely play that system with the power meters above 1watt.Indeed.
When playing music even with 6x600W peaks the average drawn current would be far, far below the 16A average.
Fwiw, I think your cases look just fine. I prefer to decorate my living room with art, pottery, photo prints, not with consumer electronics.Not really. It is one of the trade offs for the lower pricing. I'll never claim to have cases comparable to the other brands so I understand for some people it is a make or break consideration.
The breaker/fuse will just cut in and you flip it back after turning one off. Not much that can go wrong.Im out here scared of leaving a Rice Cooker and Electric Kettle on in the same 2 port outlet lol
@Buckeye Amps do you think it's possible to do a 6 or 8 channel amp with different power ratings for each channel?
125/125/250/500 or something for a 4 way speaker, or 125/250/500? You get the idea. I know that's relatively easy with icePower but it looks like Hypex has fewer options.
At this time I offer a mixture of NC252 and NC502 options.@Buckeye Amps do you think it's possible to do a 6 or 8 channel amp with different power ratings for each channel?
125/125/250/500 or something for a 4 way speaker, or 125/250/500? You get the idea. I know that's relatively easy with icePower but it looks like Hypex has fewer options.
Hypex specifications for the NC502MP:I am talking about specs, not about opinions. The review does not cover any specs. I do not know if the manufacturer specifies the amp at 6x500W/4ohm and what current consumption specifies from 120V then. Maybe @Buckeye Amps would tell us.
That sounds like fun!Yup. Even them. So long as you don’t listen to sine waves or test the amp into load banks, I think you’d be fine.
If you ran 6 subwoofers you might get the fuse warm. That’d be how you’d do it if you were gonna do it.
I'd say your order backlog shows you have made a good call in that respect. Maybe a more upscale and expensive case is something you would want to consider as an option in the future if you expand as you have discussed. Or maybe not, if that does not fit your plan for your brand.Not really. It is one of the trade offs for the lower pricing. I'll never claim to have cases comparable to the other brands so I understand for some people it is a make or break consideration.
That's it! I KNEW you had explained the reason in another thread but I couldn't find it.Regarding the upside down XLR connectors:
You'll see in any of the tear downs I use screw (solderless) XLR connectors. If I orient the connectors properly it makes it extremely difficult to insert the wires.
Ya, at a cost of $5000 for a newer version nad m28 you get 7 channels. You can get 3 of these Buckeye 6 channel amps for a total of 18 channels for that costIt appears that my NAD M27, which Amir reviewed in September 2019, still out performs any multichannel amplifier so far, including this Buckeye, and it has a 420 Watt output at 4 Ohms when it drives only two speakers.
Review and Measurements of NAD M27 PWR Amp
This is a review and detailed measurements of the NAD M27 7-channel surround audio amplifier. It is on kind loan from a member. Seems like the M27 came out back in 2014 and costs US $4,400. The M27 has the same design language as the excellent M17 Home Theater Processor (looks only): The...www.audiosciencereview.com
But the price!It appears that my NAD M27, which Amir reviewed in September 2019, still out performs any multichannel amplifier so far, including this Buckeye, and it has a 420 Watt output at 4 Ohms when it drives only two speakers.
Review and Measurements of NAD M27 PWR Amp
This is a review and detailed measurements of the NAD M27 7-channel surround audio amplifier. It is on kind loan from a member. Seems like the M27 came out back in 2014 and costs US $4,400. The M27 has the same design language as the excellent M17 Home Theater Processor (looks only): The...www.audiosciencereview.com