T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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464.1 | It may not be your amp | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @LZO 845-2374 | Fri Jan 07 1994 09:58 | 32 |
| Nicholas,
I know nothing about the McIntosh hardware you list, but perhaps the
clue to lack of bass and volume lies with your "pair of small
speakers". Small speakers rarely give a lot of bass, and are often less
sensitive than larger models. Doubling output power to a 100W amp will
only give you 1.414 times the sound pressure for a given volume
setting, and that is only if you can be sure that you will get twice
the signal into the speakers that would get with a 50W amp. Chances are
it won't be much different; if the music signal doesn't use the full
dynamic range of the power stage you won't hear any difference at all.
Upgrading to more sensitive speakers will give more sound for a given
volume setting. Speakers with 88dB sound pressure level at 1 metre for
1 watt input will sound twice as loud as a pair rated at 85dB sensitivity
and may not necessarily be bigger than the ones you have now.
Provided your source (CD or whatever) is capable of delivering
reasonable bass, upgrading to larger speakers should give more bass as
well as being more sensitive.
Always listen before you buy, preferably at a dealer that will let you
take in your own system and let you hear where the real differences are
as you substitute first the amp, then the speakers. I don't know how
easy that will be in Hong Kong, but if you can do it I guarantee you
will hear what I mean.
Have fun, anyway.
Dave
Dave
|
464.2 | Just might be the amp | WOTVAX::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins @OLO | Mon Jan 10 1994 13:23 | 11 |
| How old is your A100? It's a bit remote, but it's just possible the
performance of your amp has very gradually gone off. I'd expect the
A100 to be very slightly soft in the bass, but not unduly so. Like
Dave I expect your speakers to be the culprits. (Don't worry Rob, my A1
looked fine!)
The reason I mention the slight possibility of the amplifier being to blame
is that I once looked inside an A100. Even though it has cooloing fans,
the commponents, especially the electrolytic capacitors looked cooked.
If they are damaged due to heat, then anything could have happed to the
sound, lack of bass being quite probable.
|
464.3 | | CHEFS::TAFF::Wob | Robert Screene, UK Finance EUC | Tue Jan 11 1994 12:35 | 11 |
| Hi Clive.
The A1 Seems to be providing sterling service. It does get the odd squirt
of contact cleaner into the source selecting switch. I wish I could get at
the volume pot in the middle but can't get the cover off easily. Just the
odd crackle if the volume is moved.
Is the A100 simply an A1 with bigger output stages hence twice the power?
Rob.
|
464.4 | | WOTVAX::PC0905::MEAKINS | Clive Meakins @OLO | Tue Jan 11 1994 13:15 | 19 |
| >The A1 Seems to be providing sterling service. It does get the odd squirt
>of contact cleaner into the source selecting switch. I wish I could get at
>the volume pot in the middle but can't get the cover off easily. Just the
>odd crackle if the volume is moved.
A few months before you took the A1 over it was given a new source selector
switch by MF. I also fitted a new volume control, I guess the heat is just a
little hostile, it uses a 100K ALPs pot. The top comes off easily, just undo
the allen bolts on the heatsinks, these screw into the central inverted U shaped
heatsink. When I re-fitted the heatsinks I found the A1 felt warmer. I made
sure the heatsinks were screwed down very tight and used quite a lot of heat
transfer compound. It seems I achieved a better thermal contact than MF did
when the A1 was manufactured. The outside may have been hotter, the inside
should be cooler.
>Is the A100 simply an A1 with bigger output stages hence twice the power?
All I know is that it is designed around the same principles and they do sound
very similar. An A100 just having bigger balls than the A1.
|