Amplifiers
Your amplifier takes the signal from your head unit and makes
it large enough to be able to drive your speakers. It is preferable to use
separate amps for high and low frequencies but it is not necessary. The problem
with using one amp for all frequencies is that you cannot adjust the levels
among different frequency ranges as easily as you can adjust outputs of separate
amps. Many people start their system with an amplifier for the low frequncies
(bass) and use their head units built-in power to drive the higher frequency
speakers. This is adequate but the built-in power in a head unit is usually not
strong enough for high volume listening and not clean enough for the discerning
ear. There are many options when choosing an amplifier.
I've also created a page for understanding power amplifier
specifications here.
RMS Power:
The power output of an amplifier should be roughly matched to what the amp will be
used for and what speakers it will be driving. Oddly enough, the most common
problem with matching speakers and amps is using an amp that is too weak to
power the speaker. When an underpowered amp is used to power a speaker, the
listener tends to turn the volume up higher in order to get more output of the
amplifier. Eventually the amplifier runs into its limit and begins to distort.
This distortion can cause the output from the amplifier to become DC for short
periods of time and DC signals of even low power can destroy a speaker.
Underpowering a speaker in this way can be more dangerous than overpowering it!
Also more power is usually necessary when powering subwoofers because of their
large size and excursion. Do not plan on using an amp of less than 75watts per
channel to drive a subwoofer. The converse holds true for higher frequencies
(midrange and treble) only 25-50watts per channel are necessary to drive
speakers in those frequency ranges, however more power will not hurt, it just
probably will not be used. Another factor in power output is stability in low
resistance loads. Sometimes you can wire mutiple subwoofers to a single channel
on an amplifier but the amp will have to work harder to drive this kind of load.
Many moderately priced amps can drive loads as low as 2 ohms or less, with 4
ohms being the typical load of a single speaker.
Power Supply Regulation:
The power supply in an amplifier converts the 12volt DC that is available in your car's
electrical system to something the amp can use to produce more power. Several
designs are employed by manufacturers today. Two classifications are regulated
and unregulated. A regulated supply produces the same power regardless of
whether your car's electrical system voltage sags (which a capacitor will help
prevent). An amp using a stiffly regulated power supply will be able to supply
full power even when the input voltage dips below 12volts. However, it will not
gain any power if the input voltage goes above 12volts. An unregulated supply's
power output depends directly on the input voltage. This causes changes in the
maximum output power with changes in the car's electrical system. I recommend
getting an amp with a regulated power supply so power output will be constant
regardless of input voltage changes. This changes if you have a stiffening
capacitor or another regulation device (Accumatch) to smooth out your car's
electrical system. In this case, buy an amp with an unregulated supply. Some
cheap amps use unregulated supplies to save money but provide none of the
benefits of a typical unregulated supply. One way to determine whether an amp
has a regulated supply or not is to view the power output specs for 12volt and
14.4volt inputs. If they are the same then the amp probably has a regulated
supply otherwise it has an unregulated one.
Tri-Mode:
Some amps can play in what is called "tri-mode." In this mode, 2 channels are used to drive a pair of high frequency speakers and one subwoofer. The subwoofer receives power from both
channels. This is a very efficient way to use an amp for more than one purpose.
A special crossover is required to separate the two ranges of frequencies and it
should have a way of adjusting the output level between the high frequency
speakers and the subwoofer. This can be a nice way to save money on your system
although it wastes a little bit of amplifier power because of the crossover and
it can be more difficult to adjust the relative level between the high and low
frequency outputs.
Other Specs:
THD (Total Harmonic Distortion) is a spec that often shows up with the power output spec. An example
would be "45wattsx2 @ 0.01% THD" This spec says that at an output level of
45watts into each channel the THD will be no more than 0.01%. Sometimes
manufacturers will quote the power spec at a THD of 1%. Be wary of this, 1% THD
is poor and either implies that the amp is not very high quality or that the
manufacturer is artificially inflating the power output spec by running the amp
into a higher distortion region where it does produce more power but more
distortion as well. Either way it is a sign of a poor amp or marketing that
decieves. Anything less than 0.1% is negligible.
Built-in Crossovers:
These allow you to use the amp to only amplify certain frequencies and dedicate the amp to a
subwoofer or some other specialized speaker. By using an amplifier's built-in
crossover you eliminate the need for a separate one which can save you
considerable money. There are sophisticated amps on the market today that
combine multiple channels and built-in crossovers so that you can use them in
place of multiple amps and a separate crossover. They are expensive but often
cheaper than buying separate components.
Pre-amp Outputs:
Some amps have pre-amp outputs which allow you to "daisy-chain" multiple amps together without
splitting the pre-amp output from your head unit. Also, if the amp has a
built-in crossover, you can use it to drive another amp. For example if you have
an amp you are going to use to drive a subwoofer with a built-in crossover at
90Hz, you can use its built-in crossover to set the amp to only amplify signals
below 90Hz for the subwoofer and then have a pre-amp output that only has
frequencies above 90Hz which you can connect to an amp that does not have a
built-in crossover. That amp can then be used to power the high frequency
drivers.
Input Sensitivities:
I have received a number of questions about input sensitivities and their importance especially
as to why 4 volt outputs on a head unit are better. Here's what an amp does: it
takes its input and makes it larger so it can drive speakers. How much larger it
can make the input signal is set by the input sensitivity and the maximum power
output of the amp. You can turn the input sensitivity all the way up but that
does not make the amp put out more power than its max, it just gets to that max
level with a smaller input voltage. To see why 4 volt head units are better lets
say we have 2 head units, model A puts out a 1 volt signal and model B puts out
a 4 volt signal max. We're connecting these head units to a 25 watt amp. The amp
puts out 10 volts.
Power = Voltage^2/Resistance = 10^2/4 = 25watts.
To get maximum output from head A, the gain needs to be 10
(10volts out per 1volt in, 10/1 = 10). Now let's say there's 0.1 volt of noise
in the signal. With our gain set at 10 with our input sensitivity control we
have amplified the noise to 1 volt. Consider what happens with head B. The gain
needs to be only 2.5 to get full output. We still get 10 volts of output but the
noise is only 0.25 volts. This noise level is 4 times lower than with head A. By
using a higher voltage head unit you can set the gain on your amp lower and thus
amplify less noise. Also lets say you left the input sensitivity set for a gain
of 10 and you used 4 volt head unit at its max. If this did not make the input
stage distort it would try to make the amp put out 40 volts (10*4) which would
be 400watts! Obviously the amp can't do that and just hits its 25watt limit. To
set your input sensitivity, turn you amp's input sensitivity almost all the way
down. Now start with your head unit at its lowest volume and turn it up until
you hear distortion and then back off some. Some head units will let you go to
full volume without distorting the pre-amp level outputs. Now with your head
unit putting out its max clean voltage, turn the input sensitivity up until you
get to the loudest your system will play without distortion or the loudest you
ever care to listen, whichever is lower. Now your amp is set to amplify the
least amount necessary to produce full volume making it amplify noise the
least.
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