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joeparaski
05-22-2008, 11:49 PM
I always thought that you can't bridge amplifiers unless they were designed to do so. Until I found this..... http://www.avahifi.com/root/equipment/bridge/index.htm

Any thoughts?

Joe

ben62670
05-23-2008, 12:22 AM
For that price I would sell the amps I was going to bridge, and buy what I was looking for power wise. I would have to question the SQ, and the reliability of the amps after using such a device. No matter how you bridge the amps would still see an 8ohm load as a 4, and a 4ohm as a 2.

F1nut
05-23-2008, 01:43 AM
^ What he said ^

disneyjoe7
05-23-2008, 02:09 AM
Well I was a bit shocked on the price myself, as I could do it with a handful of parts under $15 bucks. An op amp and a small power supply, I understand that maybe higher quality but $650. I'd be pissed when I opened that up. So I'm in 100% agreement with Ben.

mrbigbluelight
05-23-2008, 02:43 AM
Okay, so here's the diagram for bridged mono operation with two amps:

33403


So (and I'm in Learning Mode here), on the pre-outs, you're taking the "normal" hot left to the left speaker, and the "normal" hot right to the right.

This gizmo than takes the those "normal" hot signals, inverts them, than sends inverted left to the left speaker, and inverted right to the right.

Got that (I think).

So .... they say, "There is no better way to get such extraordinarily high power"

Well ..... wouldn't the weak link still be the power/quality of the power amps ?

"This sums the voltage swing of the two channels,
....got that. Simple electronics.

" at least triples the power, "

....that depends on your power amps' guts, right ?
You have an Onkyo 100 watt/channel amp, you're not going to find some miraculous 300 watts out of ether, correct ?

" and eliminates common mode distortion.

.... that may be true. In fact, it probably is.
But the inversion process will introduce time lag; it has to.
What effect this has on the end result (you sitting in your sweet spot) is unknown, I guess. But there has to be an effect.

Wouldn't a better route be to simply juice up your power amps with common ground amps ?

Inverters are good for driving variable speed motors, but ..... I don't know about their use for audio.
Inverters are "noisy", so I guess you better spend a couple of hundred extra bucks for shielding.

:confused:

appadv
05-23-2008, 04:28 AM
IMO it's not worth it, you could buy a better amp for $650.

steveinaz
05-23-2008, 11:10 AM
Soundcraftsmen used this same approach with the AB-1 bridger for bridging of their stereo amps. The AB-1 was like $49 though....

unc2701
05-23-2008, 03:56 PM
If you have XLR inputs or a phase switch (for each channel) on your amp you can do it for a few bucks. AMPS MUST BE COMMON GROUND!


Phase switch:
Flip the phase on one channel, y adapter so L&R channels get the same signal (but one will be flipped phase); tie ground posts (black); speaker wires go to hot posts (red)

XLR:
If you've got xlr output on your pre, just get an XLR y-adapter, flip the +/- pins on one side of the adapter; tie ground posts (black); speaker wires go to hot posts (red)

RCA (With XLR input on amp):
Again, take an RCA Y-adapter; On one channel you'll put the RCA tip to the +XLR and tie the RCA ground to the -XLR and XLR ground; On the other channel put the RCA tip to the -XLR and tie the RCA ground to the +XLR and XLR ground. As above, tie ground posts (black); speaker wires go to hot posts (red).

With the last method, you'll lose 3 db of gain on the input stage, but you've got the extra headroom.


If you only have RCA inputs, then yep, it's a $15 circuit to flip the phase for the one channel.

ShinAce
05-23-2008, 04:05 PM
Can't you just couple many outputs with transformers to make them float?

Bam! 10 amplifiers on 1 speaker.