Hello,
I own a Schiit Lyr, that I don't use much and I was evaluating if I could use it as a low-cost amplifier for a couple of high efficiency 16Ohm/ch speaker.
This is my reasoning behind it:
The amp max power is rated 6.0 Wrms/channel @32 ohms.
Ohm's law tells me that 6Wrm@32Ohm corresponds to 13.9Vrms x 0.433Arms, which means I can safely draw from the ampifier output at least 0.433Arms/ch without sending its output stage in thermal runaway.
Let say I connect the 16Ohm/ch speakers, and protect the output stage with a 0.4A fuse, I should be able to 2.56W of pure class A per channel.
The output impedance of the LYR2 is 2.6Ohm, so I won't expect the damping factor to be that great, but considering I am gonna be driving very lightweight drivers that shouldn't be horrible.
Anything I forgot to consider?
I own a Schiit Lyr, that I don't use much and I was evaluating if I could use it as a low-cost amplifier for a couple of high efficiency 16Ohm/ch speaker.
This is my reasoning behind it:
The amp max power is rated 6.0 Wrms/channel @32 ohms.
Ohm's law tells me that 6Wrm@32Ohm corresponds to 13.9Vrms x 0.433Arms, which means I can safely draw from the ampifier output at least 0.433Arms/ch without sending its output stage in thermal runaway.
Let say I connect the 16Ohm/ch speakers, and protect the output stage with a 0.4A fuse, I should be able to 2.56W of pure class A per channel.
The output impedance of the LYR2 is 2.6Ohm, so I won't expect the damping factor to be that great, but considering I am gonna be driving very lightweight drivers that shouldn't be horrible.
Anything I forgot to consider?
The distortion will likely go up more than you expect, but you have nothing to lose by trying it.
The distortion will likely go up more than you expect, but you have nothing to lose by trying it.
That makes totally sense. I'll give it a try and listen to it.