Amp stable for 2ohm speakers.

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Not sure if this is the right fourms to be posting this question.

Looking for suggestions for amps able to drive stable and dynamicly for a 2ohm load.

The speakers that are getting used are the Equinox Jupiter's.

Any help or discussion on this would be awsome.

I know spec's will say blah blah 2ohm but so far its been a little hit and miss as to stability of the amp.
 
Ahh , 2.5 ohm Z ... 340lbs. "save 3K $" ? Must be 15k worth of speaker.

Only an overbuilt amp can handle this.

Pass X350 or HCA2200II parasound. Class AB with dozens of outputs in
parallel.Be prepared to spend 2-5K $.

You would not want to risk these with a DIY setup ?

OS
 
Ahh , 2.5 ohm Z ... 340lbs. "save 3K $" ? Must be 15k worth of speaker.

Not sure I understand this question?


Only an overbuilt amp can handle this.

Pass X350 or HCA2200II parasound. Class AB with dozens of outputs in
parallel.Be prepared to spend 2-5K $.

You would not want to risk these with a DIY setup ?

OS

Not really sure Im going for a DIY setup its more understating the quality's Im looking for past the basic spec write ups. there is a knowledge and understanding that only a DIY community can seam to pass on...... well cause your the tinkers HEHE
 
Hafler's Excelinear series of amplifiers are stable down to 1 ohm and were supposedly designed to drive any speaker load [of that time]. They are also very reliable and relatively inexpensive. The two amplifiers of this series were the XL-280 and its higher powered sibling the XL-600. The later Strickland designed Hafler Transnova amps [9300/9303/9500/9505] are reportedly not stable into these lower impedances.
 
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Hafler's Excelinear series of amplifiers are stable down to 1 ohm and were supposedly designed to drive any speaker load [of that time]. They are also very reliable and relatively inexpensive. The two amplifiers of this series were the XL-280 and its higher powered sibling the XL-600. The later Strickland designed Hafler Transnova amps [9300/9303/9500/9505] are reportedly not stable into these lower impedances.

Transnova amplifiers had a output MOS stage with gai in tension and in current and not the usual follower. This was not the right tool for drive hard 2 or 1 Ohm load (nearly a shortcircuit). The right tool is an amplifier high current capable (HC letters of Parasound amplifier's name). Amplifier must be capable of double outup current when load halve! For this reason you need many paralleled high current capable transistors in output followers stage and ... a lot of dissipation surface with high capacity blower fan!
 
Not sure I understand this question?

Not really sure Im going for a DIY setup its more understating the quality's Im looking for past the basic spec write ups. there is a knowledge and understanding that only a DIY community can seam to pass on...... well cause your the tinkers HEHE


I only expressed curiosity about your skill level versus the expense of
your loudspeakers.
Unless you were a serious amp builder , I'm not sure making a 2R stable
amp would be in your "DIY corner" ... so I suggested the OEM alternative.

PS - I have a DIY amp that would drive them , my sub amp !

OS
 
Ostripper,
I agree about the NAD 3020 and it's only provisionally a 20 watt amp!, however it did not miss a beat with the Isobariks, although never very loud of course. The Brik's are 4 ohm nominally but drop off way below this with heavy bass. The ability of the 3020 to handle low impedances is probably one of the main reasons why it enjoyed such wide popularity; that and it's warm natural presentation.
 
I only expressed curiosity about your skill level versus the expense of
your loudspeakers.
Unless you were a serious amp builder , I'm not sure making a 2R stable
amp would be in your "DIY corner" ... so I suggested the OEM alternative.

PS - I have a DIY amp that would drive them , my sub amp !

OS

Ahh yeah very minimal to nothing on the diy amp building side of the world, merely asked the question here due to the DIY community knowledge of the internal workings of amps claiming 2ohm load performance
 
What are we talking about? We are talking about amplifiers erogating power on a REAL 2 Ohms load (maybe with same reactive components) or we talk about driving capability of a commercial amplifier driving loudspeakers with a minimal impedence of 2 Ohms on a specifical frequency or small range of frequency?
 
You could drive a loudspeaker with a minimal impedence of 2 Ohms near resonance frequency with a 20W NAD with undersized power supply transformer. It's a dinamically request of power for a fraction of second on a single frequency (or better small range); other thing is a REAL 2 Ohms load like Allison or Dalquist of glorious time of past! Try to drive it with the same NAD!
 
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