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AudioSource Amp One/A 160-Watt Stereo Power Amplifier with Internal Bridging | Well worth it
 
 


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AudioSource Amp One/A 160-Watt Stereo Power Amplifier with Internal Bridging

AudioSource

AudioSource

average customer review:based on 13 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



Power Amplifier for home stereo systems (Requires use of a Pre-Amp)


A great buy

I have owned two of these amps for almost a year now and I am very fond of them. I have four bookshelf speakers that were being power by a stereo receiver. This stereo receiver bragged that it produced 100 Watts per channel for four channel. So, supposedly each of my speakers was getting 100 Watts of power. However, power in the audio industry is not well defined. Believe me as I am a physicist, they are pretty wacky in the audio business. To calculate power, one uses the formula Power=V^2/R, where V is the RMS voltage and R is the resistance of the circuit or load. Sorry this is getting a bit technical, but the moral of the story is the audio industry feels free to choose R at will. This means they can claim any power. The sad thing is it is legal to so do. Anyway, back to the review. I bought two of these amps to power my four speaker. That means I am running 80 Watts into each speaker. This should be quieter than my old receiver, but it is not. It is much louder because these amps actually put out a real 160 Watts as opposed to my old stereo receiver which most likely put out 50 Watts per channel.

Also, the signal to noise seems excellent. These are the first amps I have owned where if I run a clean signal in and turn the volume all the way up, I do not hear a hiss coming out of my speakers. In fact, they recommend that one keeps the amps turned all the way up at all times and simply adjust the input signal volume. This is what I do an it works well. I am very satisfied this this product.


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Well worth it

This is actually a review for the AmpOne (not the /A version). This one is the same specs, except it has output meters (and x10 sensitivity), dual switchable speaker outs, and a soft-clip circuit.

I have been very impressed. I picked mine up off of Craigslist. I had to replace the meter lights and re-epoxy the meter scales in place in the meters. Otherwise, the build quality was very nice. Heavy toroidal transformer and discrete output transistors. It runs cool to the touch, amd has very adequate heatsinking. Bias and dc-offset was spot on, even after probably 10-15 years.

This thing has well exceeded my expectations. I currently use it to drive a pair of Klipsch KG4s and it will run me out of the room if I want to push it hard. And at much lower volumes, this amp never loses composure. It also drove a pair of a/d/s L-1290/2s in stereo and also was pressed into center channel duty in bridged mode. I have never had the protection engage and the soft-clip gives me some peace of mind with kids in the house.

Highly recommended


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excellent amp for the money!

I have looked for a while for a affordable mono amp that was not short on power. This amp provided the solution through it's bridging switch. The stereo mode is 80 watts per channel. This amp has 200 watts at 8 ohms bridged this allowed me to put a effective amp for my sixth and rear speaker. I am running kef iq's speakers and they demand good clean power and if you don't put enough power into them you can clip them. Clipping occurs when you turn up a speaker and the amp cannot provide the power they need. So running a speaker with not enough power is a far greater risk to it than having a more powerful amplifier run a speaker. I am using a Sunfire amp to run the other five speakers and that is a expensive 5 channel amp. Still Audio Source should be applauded for giving people a inexpensive amp that performs very well as a mono amp with 200 watts power. A buyer at this price cannot complain that the amp doesn't have internal circuits that detect and turn on and off the amp when a signal comes in like a high grade amp either. You must manually turn on the amp and set a baaic volume control on the right control knob. You don't have to set the volume control everytime however. It depends on how loud you want your speaker. But that's a small price to pay for a great little amp that can run a kef center speaker and do it well for this price. I wouldn't be afraid to run a much more expensive speaker that needs 200 watts or less on this amp either. However if you have a speaker that needs more than 200 watts then I think you are better served with a higher wattage amp. Audio Source has a few of these at decent prices. And if you have big bucks you can go for a high grade amp but In these troubled economic times many of us may not be able to spend alot on amps anymore; so this may be a good solution for your home theater mono amp needs. I do not recommend using any but a much more powerful amp on a 4 ohm speaker. Most speakers are run at 8 ohms but some aren't so I would check your speaker first before buying this amp.


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A good reason to forgo higher end amps

These work great in bridged (mono) mode. I ran three across the front of my home theaters in mono mode (one for each of my three front speakers). They did great. However, you do have to manually power each one up and down with the button on the front. Not a huge deal, but it adds to the steps one must take. I took them out of my theater, only b/c my receiver does a good job by itself and I did not have room for any more plugs in a new (old) house we bought.


reviews: page 1, 2, 3



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