Ok, Mr Burns seems to know a bit about it.
So if you can get so much power with a class D amp, why to home stereos, which sound much better than car stereos, use class A?
Is class A power just so much more clear that it's worth it to put up with the heat, etc?
It just seems to me that there would be a market for a 1500+ watt home stereo receiver, unless there was some trade off in sound quality. I can't believe that all these dudes that put so much sound in their cars wouldn't want just as much in their homes. I would.
There has to be a reason that home systems use class A if it's much easier to get the wattage with class D. I'm thinking that with the class D, you must have to have raw power to make up for something else that class A's have.
I do know this: most car stereos, as has been stated in this thread, run very low ohm speaker resistance. This basically makes it easier on the amp because there's less resistance. Most home systems run 8 ohm speakers. They would require more raw power to push the voltage through there, which would explain the higher heat.
I'm missing something here. Maybe if someone who is and E.E. that knows about amplification sees this, they could clarify.
So if you can get so much power with a class D amp, why to home stereos, which sound much better than car stereos, use class A?
Is class A power just so much more clear that it's worth it to put up with the heat, etc?
It just seems to me that there would be a market for a 1500+ watt home stereo receiver, unless there was some trade off in sound quality. I can't believe that all these dudes that put so much sound in their cars wouldn't want just as much in their homes. I would.
There has to be a reason that home systems use class A if it's much easier to get the wattage with class D. I'm thinking that with the class D, you must have to have raw power to make up for something else that class A's have.
I do know this: most car stereos, as has been stated in this thread, run very low ohm speaker resistance. This basically makes it easier on the amp because there's less resistance. Most home systems run 8 ohm speakers. They would require more raw power to push the voltage through there, which would explain the higher heat.
I'm missing something here. Maybe if someone who is and E.E. that knows about amplification sees this, they could clarify.
