Car Audio Amplifiers
The purpose of a car audio amplifier is to take a low level signal
from the source unit and change it into a high level signal for driving
the speakers. Amplifiers range in power from about twenty watts per channel
to over one thousand watts per channel. The price range can be anywhere
from fifty dollars to several thousand dollars depending on features,
power output and quality. An amplifier may have as little as one channel
of output to as many as eight channels at the time of this writing. The
most common amplifiers are two and four channel models although mono subwoofer
amplifiers are gaining in popularity.
Amplifier Power Ratings
Extra features may also be built into a power amplifier. These features
include built-in active crossovers, equalizers, signal processing and
speaker level inputs. When shopping for an amplifier consider that all
power ratings are not created equal. Some of the low-quality brands will
exaggerate or even outright lie about the power output of their amplifiers.
This is a good reason to stick with the well known manufacturers. The
only true measure of an amplifier's power is its continuous power rating
or R.M.S. rating. R.M.S. is an acronym for root mean square and refers
to the amplifiers average power output.
Car Amplifier Quality
Also keep in mind the quality of the amplifier. A generally good indication
of quality build and the power output is the size and the weight of the
amplifier itself. Better quality amplifiers will usually have a heavier
and larger heatsink versus a low quality amplifier of the same power rating.
Do not accept size as a definite indication though. I bought an amplifier
at a yard sale for two dollars that was two feet long, eight inches wide
and two inches tall that had a five inch square circuit board inside of
it. This amplifier was so poorly built that I could actually hear the
music I was playing coming from the circuit board itself. However there
are many top quality amplifiers that do not follow this rule. Also a good
indication of an amplifier's true output is the size of the fuse used.
True two hundred watt amplifiers do not use a ten amp fuse. Use your head
when buying and keep in mind the brand's reputation for quality. If you
find yourself on a budget or lack space for many components then the economical
thing to do is buy a multi-channel amplifier with the built in features
and processors that you desire. This can save a lot of room and several
hundred dollars in added component and installation cost. The quality
will be a little less as compared to outboard processors but will probably
not be noticed. Also, by minimizing the number of components the chance
of noise entering into the system is lessened.
Some features and aspects of amplifiers to consider are:
- Bridgeable: This feature allows a pair of amplifier power channels
to be combined into one channel of greater power. This is usually used
for driving a subwoofer although it will work with any other type of speaker
as well
- Channels: The more channels an amplifier has the greater the
installation flexibility it will have. Especially in terms of options,
future add-ons and upgrades.
- Class: This refers to the way the amplifier operates. The three
types that are most likely to be encountered are A, A/B, and D. Class A
amplifiers are the least efficient in terms of power consumption, staying
on continually, but also have better sound in general than A/B amplifiers.
They are very rare in car audio. Class A/B amplifiers are more efficient
than the class A design and are the most common type. Almost all amplifiers
in the car audio market are of the A/B design. Class D amplifiers are usually
reserved for high power subwoofer amplifiers and can reach efficiencies
in the 80%+ range. This design can therefore be smaller, uses less current
and produces less heat than the other classes.
- Connectors: This is the method of attachment
used for wires that are connected to the amplifier, including
speaker and power wires. The most common kind is the screw
terminal strip. This is a series of screw connectors that
can be removed and replaced without compromising the amplifier.
The other main type of attachment is the "Molex" type
connector. This method involves a wire harness that plugs
into the amplifier after the power and speaker connections
have been made with a crimp or solder connection. If the
amplifier is installed in more than one system these wires
can get pretty short over time and become more difficult
and even dangerous to work with. A variation on the two
is a harness that the power and speaker wires screw into.
Then the harness plugs into the amplifier. This is probably
the most convenient of all connections.
- Crossover/Filter: A built in crossover can be useful, especially
if it is many frequencies of adjustment. A filter is a crossover that only
affects one channel, not actually splitting frequencies but simply reducing
a range of them.
- Distortion: This is often given as T.H.D. or total harmonic distortion.
It is the measure of how much an amplifier will change a signal from the
input signal it is given. Figures below 0.1% are negligible and will not
be heard. Usually the figure can be in the 3% range without being heard
but virtually all high quality amplifiers will have a T.H.D. below 0.1%.
- Efficiency: This is the ratio of of power input (from the battery)
to power output (to the speakers). A 100 watt amplifier with an efficiency
of 50% would take in 200 watts of power from the battery and output 100
watts of power to the speakers. The other 100 watts of power would be wasted
as heat. The higher the efficiency of an amplifier the better.
- Power Output: The rated power output of an amplifier
should be given into a four ohm load, all channels driven
from twenty to twenty thousand hertz (20Hz-20kHz). Keep
in mind that while the low end amplifiers are exaggerated
in their power output, many high end amplifiers are under-rated
in their power output. These are sometimes called "cheater amps" because
they allow a car audio competitor to compete in a lower
power class while in reality having a larger amplifier.
This under-rating can be three times less than the actual
power output.
- Power Supply: The two most common types are the IC chip and the
MOSFET supply. The IC chip is what is used in most source units (head units)
and are only capable of producing about twenty watts per channel. MOSFET
is the more common design and has a smoother sound than the chip design.
- Pre-amp Inputs: This is a set of jacks that will accept a low
level pre-amp signal from a source or processing unit.
- Pre-amp Outputs: This is a set of jacks that pass on a low level
pre-amp signal to another amplifier or processing unit. These will sometimes
be filtered outputs.
- Separate Gain Controls: This allows the gain of each channel
of the amplifier to be set independently of the other(s).
- Speaker Level Inputs: For source units that do not have pre-amp
level RCA outputs this feature may be used to take the signal from the
speaker leads of the source unit. The signal will not be as clean as a
pre-amp level output but will be adequate for most factory upgrade applications.
- Stability: The measure of how low of an impedance load an amplifier
can handle (in ohms). Any good quality amplifier will be two ohm stable
while a rare few will go as low as a quarter of an ohm. Ideally an amplifier
should double its power each time the load is halved. For example, a one
hundred watt amplifier (into a four ohm load) should produce two hundred
watts into a two ohm load and so on. This is most useful when running multiple
speakers off of a single amplifier or in sound off competitions that are
classed by total power output.
- Tri-Mode Output: This feature is available under different names
but is the ability of an amplifier to run a stereo pair of speakers and
a mono subwoofer (or center channel) from only two channels of the amplifier.
Personally, I would not recommend doing this. Instead buy a good quality
four channel amplifier and bridge two of the channels for the subwoofer.
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