Behringer: iNUKE NU12000DSP
I wonder who's going to be the first to try out that big bad baby on their subs?
How do you power an amp supposedly capable of delivering 12kW (6kWx2 into 2 ohms) anyway?
I wonder who's going to be the first to try out that big bad baby on their subs?
How do you power an amp supposedly capable of delivering 12kW (6kWx2 into 2 ohms) anyway?
dont worry, comes with 15 amp iec cable.
JK. 🙂
Which is a 10 amp IEC rated connector in Europe!
Mik
Looks like a powerCON style connection in the photos on the Behringer website.
So might be up to 32A.
Even then the full power will probably only be available for transient peaks.
The NU6000 has nearly the same power rating into a 8 Ohm speaker as it uses a bridge mode output. The 12000 will only have a real advantage into lower impedance loads.
How much of a practical advantage that is, will need to be proven.🙂
So might be up to 32A.
Even then the full power will probably only be available for transient peaks.
The NU6000 has nearly the same power rating into a 8 Ohm speaker as it uses a bridge mode output. The 12000 will only have a real advantage into lower impedance loads.
How much of a practical advantage that is, will need to be proven.🙂
If it actually delivers the promised power output into musically relevant transients, then I congratulate Behringer for their efforts. Continuous sinewave power is actually not that useful.
I would love a Speakerpower module or two but they cost three times as much. I did not see the low budget berry units in the comparison.the rms power of other amplifiers: Comparative Performance - SpeakerPower
The old iron Cerwin Vega CV-5000 would probably be the product to compare it to. (same $ range)
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Loudspeakers
- Subwoofers
- Behringer iNuke 12000DSP (yes, that's THREE zeroes...)