whines wrote:I'm setting up a preset on the DCX to use my old EP2500 amp to run the T39's (3012lf) off of, one per channel in mono (not bridged) mode.
The weirdness I'm seeing is that when I hooked up the voltmeter and ran a 50hz sine through it, then opened up the gain to full, it hit 100v. This is higher than I was expecting...the lookup tables in the sticky on this subject suggest that the 550w into 8 ohms should give me 67v. (
http://speakeressentials.com/pages/8-oh ... okup-table)
Try with a 1kHz sine wave. That is what the amp is rated with. You can NOT use that to set limiters for the sub...I use 60Hz....but this is to just measure the amp and get a "gut check." I get around 70v when I measure my EP2500's with a 1kHz signal.
Keep in mind that the amp has an input sensitivity. 1.23V (+4dBu) will produce a "full" signal. How large an input signal are you sending to the amp. You can measure that with the same volt meter.
Keep in mind that the amps rating is more a function of the amount of current it can provide and the capability of the heat sinks to keep up with the load on the amp.
whines wrote:
I don't need to put any sort of dummy load across the output (aside from the voltmeter, set to measure AC) to get an accurate reading, do I?
Solid state amps do NOT require a dummy load.
Rune Bivrin wrote:If it was clipping the average voltage would be higher. What your volt meter is showing depends on what it's actually reading - peak, average, RMS.
The specific setting of the volt meter can make a difference. RMS is 0.707 of the peak value. So, for a peak of 100V, the RMS would be 70V. This is "close enough" to make me wonder what your volt meter was really showing.
Find another volt meter and double check the reading.