thinking of build a 2-channel for my office. had my eye on the new Onkyo A-5VL(http://www.onkyousa.com/model.cfm?m=...=Amplifier&p=s). it has 40wpc at 8 ohms and 100wpc at 2 ohms. I am not sure if this one has enough power to drive the LSi9.
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Vist our Online Storethinking of build a 2-channel for my office. had my eye on the new Onkyo A-5VL(http://www.onkyousa.com/model.cfm?m=...=Amplifier&p=s). it has 40wpc at 8 ohms and 100wpc at 2 ohms. I am not sure if this one has enough power to drive the LSi9.
I believe it could do the job but it definitely wouldn't hurt to have more power!
How big is your office? And what's your budget? Are you set on an integrated?
I don't read the newsssspaperssss because dey aaaallllllllll...... have ugly print.
Thanks for your reply. The room is about 10x15'. I am novice so not ready for separate pieces yet. just try to get a simple system with relative good sound. I had Polk as my HT and happy with it, so I am thinking go with Polk again.
I am using a Cambridge Soundwork CD 740 in office. For a boombox it sounds very good, but Hey, people are growing:D. I don't have a budget but I am thinking of $2000 total.
My local audio shop carry NAD and Totem speakers, maybe I should give it a try?
Last edited by djyd; 11-23-2009 at 02:56 PM. Reason: typo
Separates really aren't any more complicated.... :)
I'd say grab the B&K preamp in the classifieds (B&K Ref 5) and a used B&K amp or other decent amp of your choice, and stick with the LSi9s.
I'm sure in an office setting you aren't going to be headbanging to your LSi9s, so the Onkyo should be ok, but i'd bet that a decent set of separates would sound way better.
How much is that Onkyo anyways?
I don't read the newsssspaperssss because dey aaaallllllllll...... have ugly print.
I don't read the newsssspaperssss because dey aaaallllllllll...... have ugly print.
CDP: http://www.polkaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?t=91568 $100
Preamp: http://www.polkaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?t=91037 $325
Amp: http://www.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/cls....eference-2220- $450
Add cables of your choice. :)
I don't read the newsssspaperssss because dey aaaallllllllll...... have ugly print.
it is looks like an e36 m3 kit..... just the front lip is from something else....not sure what.....
^Please die in a fire.
I don't read the newsssspaperssss because dey aaaallllllllll...... have ugly print.
The Basement HT ------- PC Rig
The Lsi9's need some serious power. A used Adcom or a NAD amp would be a great choice.
For an office rig we're talking background music, no? Why not LSi7s, much easier to drive, plenty of sound for 10'X15'.
Good ol' Onkyo, up to their usual confusing model number designations. The original A-5 was a late seventies silver faced model which got about 45 wpc at 8 ohms. That this A-5 is rated for 2 ohm loads is fairly impressive, if they're being conservative about it. Also, it has a phono preamp, though I wish they had some frequency response data (RIAA +- ? dB)
As for a more powerful amp, the brute fact is that the recommended maximum of 200 wpc buys you +3.5 dB, even though I base that on the Onkyo's dynamic power of 90 watts into 4 ohms. There's no data for continuous power into 4 ohms, per FTC specs - but if this amp can honestly drive 2 ohm loads, it's likely to be a high current amp, so continous power will be nearly doubled from the 8 ohm 40 wpc. Three and a half decibels isn't a lot.
You'll mostly be operating at a couple watts anyway, especially since your room dimensions aren't huge. The speaker's efficiency is "88 db", which I presume really means 88 dB/watt/meter, not ultra efficient. But bear in mind, a stereo pair at 1 w, 1 m, will give you 91 dB, though at typical listening distances, say 6 feet (2m), it'd go down by a few dB...a SWAG (scientifically wild assed guess) would be -3 dB, leaving you again at 88 dB. But that's pretty loud - in fact, many people advise against long-term listening at levels about 80 dB.
Do some more math, assuming speaker response proportional to power input. 76 dB is 12 dB down from 88 dB, requiring 0.063 watts, and that's a fairly decent volume. Yes, there are dynamic range considerations, depending on whether you listen to CD's that pay special attention to wide dynamic range.
I do have a "thing" about worrying about amplifier power for speakers, as my first set of speakers were chosen out of fears of driving inefficient speakers, and those speakers turned out to be Godawful crap. Polk LSi series speakers, at least from the LSi 15 I listened to when I informed the friendly audio salesman that I was looking for Monitor 10 replacements, most definitely aren't crap. And they aren't cheap, either, though by audiophile standards, they barely register.
Last edited by phono2; 12-05-2009 at 01:57 PM. Reason: Caught off guard by these speakers being 4 ohms rather than 8
Dis will power them nicely
http://www.polkaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?t=91925
The Basement HT ------- PC Rig
Home:
Onkyo TX-6500MKII/Polk LSI 9's (A)Polk TSi 100(B)/Polk PSW 10/Onkyo C-S5VL/Technics SL-QD33
Home 2 (Playback):
Dynaudio BM5A MKII/Dynaudio SUB 250MC/Audigy 2 ZS
College:
JBL LSR 2325P/JBL 2310SP/MOTU UltraLite MKIII
Phono's post above on power is spot on. It does get more complex though, it depends on how far down the rabbit hole you want to go. I estimated a while back that my amps put out no more then 8w when listening to music, yet they can output 525w per channel into a 8ohm load.
Things get more complex when you factor in impedance dips, the 4x power increase required to play a tone every time you drop on octave, and how the speakers interact with the room, headroom requirements for dynamic discs, etc.
Many people don't need hundreds of watts per power, it all depends on your situation. I listened to LSi9s for a while with a amp that outputted a max of 15w w/ a continuous rating of 10w and never had a problem, buy YMMV.
Last edited by Gaara; 12-06-2009 at 10:32 AM.
The Basement HT ------- PC Rig
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