eyesofra wrote:In the manual i can see that the xenon has a 0.2v to 8v sensitivity range.
So why is it that is works the best with a 13v input when we can match it with any input from 0.2 to 8v ???
I do understand that its better to have a higher voltage level going in to the amp , but i really don't get this 13v part.
Pls do elaborate on this.Thanks again
OK I can help here...
OK All input and output values for amplifiers are rated in R.M.S. scale on the amps themselves. .2 volts RMS = 200 miili-volts RMS. R.M.S. = Root Mean Square of the voltage or in laymen terms DC equivalent.
Now based on some simple math the 13 volt figure comes from the PEAK voltage equivalent of 9 volts RMS.
If you multiply 9 volts RMS X 1.414 <peak to peak multiplier value> you get 12.726 volts Peak to Peak AC voltage.
So you get 13 volts Peak to Peak AC voltage input equals 9 Volts RMS DC equivalent.
Does this make sense to everyone as to the why and how of the input voltage difference ratings Eerin spoke about ????
Also any amps input SPAN can be altered by changing the input by adding or subtracting the input multiplier circuitry.
PPI has a simple mod to make there older 2.0 volt amps go to 8.0 volt drive levels, by simply cutting a trace in each RCA input circuit and adding a 30 K ohm resistor to form a 4 to 1 voltage divider network.
So don't let input voltage scare or confuse you, or throw you any curves as thats why they build line drivers. To raise the drive voltage and to lower the Noise floor of a audio system. This effectively cancels HISS and other noises that the car can inflict on the audio signal.
High End Audio systems tend to use Line Drivers to gain lower noise floor figures to allow for Much higher playback levels involved with very high SPL systems.
You don't need this sort of thing on a average run of the mill day to day basic amplifier deck and four system most people get installed in their daily beater.
Only freaks of nature like myself need toys like this so we can cause nose bleeds in the adjacent cars at a stop light
Don't blame Eerin for the fact that the audio industry as a whole was setup by engineers looking at bottom line numbers. Eerin was using the real world PEAK values that you honestly look to on a daily basis for answers.
In the real world Peak Unclipped signals are where your SPL figures come from, and that clean unclipped large dynamic music content gets faithfully reproduced without causing you to bleed internally from the distortion, and amplifier failures that overdriven systems deliver daily to average unknowing audio enthusiast.
