Eric D wrote:I am not going to shoot the messenger, but I question the usefulness of the Amp Dyno itself.
I could be mistaken, but I believe the designer of the Amp Dyno is a previous or maybe even current Rockford Fosgate employee. He should remember the "Powercube" tests that Rockford employed for years in their testing, and the importance of inductive and capacitive testing.
I don't doubt the numbers from this video, but unless I am missing something, the Amp Dyno is just presenting the amplifier with a resistive load, which is very easy on the amplifier. The Powercube measurements placed both inductive and capacitive loads on amps, which was very challenging for many amps, and would really show limitations in amplifier designs.
I guess you can use the Amp Dyno for direct comparisons such as this MS2125 vs some other amp from some other vendor. I would not doubt it though that many amps which measure higher on the Amp Dyno than another perpendicular amplifier may not measure higher with real world SPL measurements in a real world environment.
Now this is totally an assumption from me, but my guess is the Amp Dyno is marketed towards "the folks" who have some cash to burn and want to play with amp measurements. I highly doubt there are any of these in the lab or the production line at any major audio manufacturer. Like I said, this is just my assumption. If anyone knows of a manufacturer using an Amp Dyno, I would love to hear about it.
Either way, thank you for the testing of these old school amps. Even though I question the Amp Dyno, it is far more informative than the testing I do on amps, with my very limited equipment.
No need to shoot the messenger...I'm already full of bullet holes, lol.
I agree the PowerCube is a fantastic way to test an amplifier, but I'd hardly say the resistive tests are "easy" on the amplifier. I'm a big supporter of D'Amore and his tools. If the AMM-1 would have come out before the big Amp Dyno, I'd most likely only have the AMM-1. It does a lot of what the Amp Dyno does, even more in some cases (will test reactive loads, whereas the Amp Dyno only does resistive).
Back to the Amp Dyno and why I use it. I started testing amps for fun about 5 years ago after putting together a relatively simple setup with some resistors and a Velleman O'scope. When the Amp Dyno was introduced, I felt it would be good to have a tool that was calibrated at the factory and was designed by a really accomplished engineer (previous head engineer at RF, developed the T15kW amplifier). I'm not rich, but many donated to the cause and helped me obtain the Amp Dyno (not by my asking, I must say....one of my Facebook followers started a campaign). I'm just a normal guy who is a car audio and most specifically an amplifier enthusiast who has some basic video production skills. The Amp Dyno is not a PowerCube (also doesn't cost $25k), nor is it an Audio Precision One (also doesn't cost $35k)...but it is a well engineered tool capable of measuring wattage of amplifiers. May not give you all of the info as the other two tools do, but it can give you a good idea of what an amp is capable of. It also makes it impossible to "cheat" as it displays the wattage, ohm load and resulting voltage.
As for mfg's using the Amp Dyno, Skar Audio uses one to test their amps. I realize they are a "new school" company and probably can't afford a PowerCube or AudioPrecision, but at least one mfg does indeed use this tool.
Thanks for all the comments and feedback, I appreciate it all
