Hi,
Looking to add a power amp to my system to drive my Sonus Faber Grand Piano Home.
Pre will be using the pre-out of my Plinius 8100 int amp. A dedicated pre will be next in the shopping list...
Music genre:mostly jazz, vocal
Do you think the X150.5 will be a good match with my speakers?
Thanks
Looking to add a power amp to my system to drive my Sonus Faber Grand Piano Home.
Pre will be using the pre-out of my Plinius 8100 int amp. A dedicated pre will be next in the shopping list...
Music genre:mostly jazz, vocal
Do you think the X150.5 will be a good match with my speakers?
Thanks
rc5al said:sorry.. one more qns.. does the X150.5 accept banana plugs for the speaker terminals?
Sorry, it does not.
Nelson Pass said:
Sorry, it does not.
Vix said:
Choky, they must have been wrong holes!!
I still see holes .......
Nelson Pass said:That rear panel does not say X150.5...
yup - that's the catch (22) - even if it's from page 8 of
actual x150.5_om.pdf ...........
And perhaps we should answer the original question...
If I got it right by searching, the speakers are electrically:
Sensitivity: 90dB/2.83V at 1 meter
Nominal Impedance: 6 ohms
This won't be a problem for the X150.5 to drive them.
When it comes to sound, me personally believe it can't go wrong with a Pass amplifier.
An interesting thing is that it has 30 dB gain. For me it is sometimes a problem to play music quietly.
Do you think the X150.5 will be a good match with my speakers?
If I got it right by searching, the speakers are electrically:
Sensitivity: 90dB/2.83V at 1 meter
Nominal Impedance: 6 ohms
This won't be a problem for the X150.5 to drive them.
When it comes to sound, me personally believe it can't go wrong with a Pass amplifier.
An interesting thing is that it has 30 dB gain. For me it is sometimes a problem to play music quietly.
Thanks for all replies.
gain of 30 dB is using the XLR or RCA?
I did a google on Gain:
The gain of an amplifier is the ratio of output to input power or amplitude, and is usually measured in decibels. (When measured in decibels it is logarithmically related to the power ratio: G(dB)=10 log(Pout/Pin)).
ermmm... in layman term, to play music quietly the gain should be as high or as low as possible?
Thanks
gain of 30 dB is using the XLR or RCA?
I did a google on Gain:
The gain of an amplifier is the ratio of output to input power or amplitude, and is usually measured in decibels. (When measured in decibels it is logarithmically related to the power ratio: G(dB)=10 log(Pout/Pin)).
ermmm... in layman term, to play music quietly the gain should be as high or as low as possible?
Thanks
Audio_se said:
An interesting thing is that it has 30 dB gain. For me it is sometimes a problem to play music quietly.
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