I have four TOA P-924 power amps that I am selling. They are large, heavy, and powerful. Solid state, 240 watts each. Considering they are considered "utility amps" by the hi-fi elite, they sound really very good. Clean sound, stable with taps for 8 ohm and 4 ohm loads (They use output transformers for use with line voltage loads if needed, but you can tap directly to the speaker level outputs. The 4 ohm output is direct and not connected to the transformer so the signal is a little cleaner). Currently fitted with the screw-terminal balanced or unbalanced input modules.
Silver face! and Meters!
If you are lookin for big solid state power with 100% channel separation, at a VERY reasonable budget, these are for you.
Pictures coming.
Specs below.
Pricing (add shipping and handling and know they are HEAVY, shipping will be well north of $30 per amp):
$300/4
$175/2
$100/1
$0.3125 per watt into 4 ohms if you buy all four.
The marks on the face are some small scratches and sticker residue which I will try to get off with goofoff.
I would suggest using the 4 ohm taps for full frequency response (the transformer terminated 8 ohm output cuts off at 50 Hz for PA use.)
Take the rack ears off and build some wood cases around them.
If I continued to use them for an active crossover build, that's what I would do.
Video link.
Untitled on Vimeo
Silver face! and Meters!
If you are lookin for big solid state power with 100% channel separation, at a VERY reasonable budget, these are for you.
Pictures coming.
Specs below.
Pricing (add shipping and handling and know they are HEAVY, shipping will be well north of $30 per amp):
$300/4
$175/2
$100/1

$0.3125 per watt into 4 ohms if you buy all four.
The marks on the face are some small scratches and sticker residue which I will try to get off with goofoff.


I would suggest using the 4 ohm taps for full frequency response (the transformer terminated 8 ohm output cuts off at 50 Hz for PA use.)



Take the rack ears off and build some wood cases around them.
If I continued to use them for an active crossover build, that's what I would do.
Video link.
Untitled on Vimeo
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