This is a review and detailed measurements of the Trinnov Amplitude 16 home theater amplifier. It was sent to me by the company and costs US $12,500.
We have an on-off switch and a faint display that shows whether the channels are bridged or not. Given the main application of being in a dark room, you wouldn't want any bling on the front. Back panel shows the amazing number of channels crammed into this enclosure, courtesy of ICEPower class D amplifiers and custom power supply:
The binding posts show up impressively. And dual AC input (both must be used) hints at the box delivering 16 concurrent channels of amplification (or 8 bridged -- not tested). Inputs are provided through DB-25 connectors. Trinnov supplied me with a very supple and high quality converter to XLRs which made testing easy.
Trinnov Amplitude 16 Amplifier Measurements
I performed all of my testing on channels 1 and 2 in single ended/non-bridged mode. Let's start with our dashboard:
Nice to see the unit meet and exceed the spec on noise+distortion. Performance is not quite as good as the Trinnov 8m I tested but still quite competent:
Gain is on the low side but that is intentional to maximize SNR by matching the Altitude 16 processor. Speaking of SNR, performance is excellent there:
There is no load dependency which is nice:
I tested using reactive loads and it delivered the same.
Multitone shows some rise in distortion at higher frequencies:
Which then gets reflected in intermodulation distortion using 19 and 20 kHz tones:
Crosstalk is excellent:
Specs are met with respect to power:
Full power is more or less maintained for the full audio range:
We can see the same in our sweeps vs frequency where 20 Hz output is not impacted:
The amplifier impressively doubles down in power up to 20 Hz including with reactive loads:
Noise on power off may be audible on sensitive speakers:
Amplifier is stable on after a few minutes:
Conclusions
It is clear that the Amplitude 16 is competently designed despite including 16 channels of power -- more than I have seen before. This takes away massive amount of clutter in a high-channel ATMOS home theater setup. We give up a small notch in performance from 8m but that is a trade off that I happily accept in not having to have two boxes.
On the cost, please note that this product is sold through the installer channel which requires healthy margins. So please don't compare it to companies selling direct.
I am going to recommend the Trinnov Amplitude 16 amplifier.
------------
As always, questions, comments, recommendations, etc. are welcome.
Appreciate any donations using: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/how-to-support-audio-science-review.8150/
We have an on-off switch and a faint display that shows whether the channels are bridged or not. Given the main application of being in a dark room, you wouldn't want any bling on the front. Back panel shows the amazing number of channels crammed into this enclosure, courtesy of ICEPower class D amplifiers and custom power supply:
The binding posts show up impressively. And dual AC input (both must be used) hints at the box delivering 16 concurrent channels of amplification (or 8 bridged -- not tested). Inputs are provided through DB-25 connectors. Trinnov supplied me with a very supple and high quality converter to XLRs which made testing easy.
Trinnov Amplitude 16 Amplifier Measurements
I performed all of my testing on channels 1 and 2 in single ended/non-bridged mode. Let's start with our dashboard:
Nice to see the unit meet and exceed the spec on noise+distortion. Performance is not quite as good as the Trinnov 8m I tested but still quite competent:
Gain is on the low side but that is intentional to maximize SNR by matching the Altitude 16 processor. Speaking of SNR, performance is excellent there:
There is no load dependency which is nice:
I tested using reactive loads and it delivered the same.
Multitone shows some rise in distortion at higher frequencies:
Which then gets reflected in intermodulation distortion using 19 and 20 kHz tones:
Crosstalk is excellent:
Specs are met with respect to power:
Full power is more or less maintained for the full audio range:
We can see the same in our sweeps vs frequency where 20 Hz output is not impacted:
The amplifier impressively doubles down in power up to 20 Hz including with reactive loads:
Noise on power off may be audible on sensitive speakers:
Amplifier is stable on after a few minutes:
Conclusions
It is clear that the Amplitude 16 is competently designed despite including 16 channels of power -- more than I have seen before. This takes away massive amount of clutter in a high-channel ATMOS home theater setup. We give up a small notch in performance from 8m but that is a trade off that I happily accept in not having to have two boxes.
On the cost, please note that this product is sold through the installer channel which requires healthy margins. So please don't compare it to companies selling direct.
I am going to recommend the Trinnov Amplitude 16 amplifier.
------------
As always, questions, comments, recommendations, etc. are welcome.
Appreciate any donations using: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/how-to-support-audio-science-review.8150/