Vivek Batra Posted February 28, 2019 Author Share Posted February 28, 2019 @MetropolisLakeOutfitters @Cory Hi Guys are you able to watch this thread? Not sure if tagging you would send any alerts to you? I need your help in improving my music listening experience as I am a newbie here. Thanks 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators dtel's wife Posted February 28, 2019 Moderators Share Posted February 28, 2019 3 hours ago, Vivek Batra said: @MetropolisLakeOutfitters @Cory Hi Guys are you able to watch this thread? Not sure if tagging you would send any alerts to you? I need your help in improving my music listening experience as I am a newbie here. Thanks They do not ship outside of the US. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paducah Home Theater Posted February 28, 2019 Share Posted February 28, 2019 yeah I get the alerts, might be able to give a recommendation or two but yeah I can't ship over there. There must be another cory here, that profile isn't mine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vivek Batra Posted March 1, 2019 Author Share Posted March 1, 2019 (edited) On 2/27/2019 at 3:18 PM, JefDC said: Hello Vivek, I have a Denon AVR4300H - same model as yours but a little older (1 or 2 years) - and have RP8060FA's connected as fronts. The RP8060FA is a RP8000 but with an Atmos module build in. My experience is exactly the same as yours, the speakers sound flat, lifeless and lack bass (you use a subwoofer so you might not notice the lack of bass so hard). After connecting an external amplifier the speakers came to life. That external amplifier has a smaller (but similar) power specification at 8 Ohms compared to the Denon but can power speakers with impedances down to 2,7 Ohm. (the amplifier is a XTZ Edge A2-300 - class D ICEpower). I cannot find impedance charts for the new RP8000/8060FA yet but the older model RP280 had impedance dips to 3,1 Ohms. (see attached graph - source: https://hometheaterreview.com/klipsch-rp-280fa-tower-speaker-reviewed/?page=2) I suspect that the Denon is not capable to power a RP8000/RP8060 properly because of the impedance dips of the speakers i.e. there is sufficient power for 8 ohms but the amplifier cannot generate enough current when the impedance drops. Although I like the Denon for all its functionality, the audio part seems to be lacking. Also, my Denon amplifier runs so hot (on the 8Ohm setting) that the video convertor occasionally stops working. After changing the impedance setting in the Denon from 8 to 4 Ohms the amplifier runs much cooler and without video convertor problems, but it did not change the sound of the audio I would suggest that you borrow a few amplifiers from friends or willing shops and evaluate the RP8000 with those before changing your speakers. The sound quality difference was immediately obvious in my case. Jef Hi Jef Are you planning to add a external 2 channel power amp? May be 200w/ch will it make any difference? What other amps you tried? Edited March 1, 2019 by Vivek Batra Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JefDC Posted March 1, 2019 Share Posted March 1, 2019 (edited) Hi Vivek, Yes, that XTZ amplifier is connected permanently to the pre-out of the Denon AVR4300H as external power amp powering my 2 front speakers. (it was my intention to build a 7.0.4 Atmos speaker lay-out, this requires an external amp with the AVR4300 as such I had ordered the amp at the same time as the RP8060FA speakers). I have not tried another amp yet. The power specification is not the main issue - even 50W/channel can be sufficient - but the amplifier must be able to provide sufficient current when the impedance is low or complex. As you can see in the graph above (dark green line) a speaker presents different impedances in function of the frequency and some amplifiers have difficulty driving speakers with low impedance dips. A rule of thumb to asses the ability of an amplifier to drive low impedances is to look at the power spec at 8 and 4 Ohms (and even better if lower impedances are specified). A stable amplifier wil show double the power from 8 to 4 Ohms for example 100W/ch at 8 Ohms and 200W/ch at 4 Ohms. In case of the AVR4300H one can find the following spec in the manual: 130 W x 2-channel (8 Ω/ohms) and only 190 W x 2-channel (4 Ω/ohms) in stead of the expected 260 W at 4 Ω/ohms. This indicates that the amplifier does not like lower impedances. As the older comparable speaker model RP-280FA dipped to 3.1 Ω/ohms this presents an even more difficult impedance for the AVR4300 amplifier. As I wrote earlier: best to borrow and try a few different amplifiers Alternatively you could consider to buy and try an inexpensive Chinese class D amplifier (<100$) as generally these are quiet good with low impedances. Jef Edited March 1, 2019 by JefDC grammar 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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