DecibleLvr Posted April 9, 2002 Share Posted April 9, 2002 I need some advice on the following: I am planning to bi-amp my KLF 20's using a Yamaha RV 800 and a Denon PMA 2000R. Which amp should I use to power the high -end, and which to drive the two 10 inch woofers? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mighty Favog Posted April 9, 2002 Share Posted April 9, 2002 I would say that before you decide which should run HF and which for LF do this. Be sure each has an out level adjustment. Since your dealing with two different amps they have different characteristics as far as output level with X-amount of input. For example: If the volume control is at, say, 9 o'clock. One amp may be putting out .75 of a watt while the other may be at 1.25 watts. A pretty good tonal mismatch. ------------------ Tom's Money Pit This message has been edited by tblasing on 04-09-2002 at 08:21 AM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DecibleLvr Posted April 9, 2002 Author Share Posted April 9, 2002 OK, that makes sense to me . So tell me, what is the correct bi-amp method? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mighty Favog Posted April 9, 2002 Share Posted April 9, 2002 If there is a level control on each amp try this. Put a pink noise signal through your system with both amps connected the way you described. Now get a multi-meter and measure the amount of AC voltage between the bottom speaker posts at the speaker. Now do the same for the upper posts. Now adjust the amp driving the HF drivers to equal that of the reading at the bottom pair. There still may be some tonal differences this way but the only way to clear that up is to use two of the exact same amps for both HF and LF. Have you ever thought about bi-wiring instead? I did for my 20's with a Rotel RB1080 (underated @ 200wpc) and some MIT Terminator 2 Bi-wire speaker cables (Audio Advisor has them half off list) and this thing has some major punch and bass extension. The mids are very natural and never protruding. The highs actually ahve to be backed off into a cut in eq. once in a while. Hope this helps!! ------------------ Tom's Money Pit Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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