MW3 wrote:Elite.4 Gut Shot...


Looks like a natural progression of the clean Ti design. Nice work

MW3 wrote:Elite.4 Gut Shot...
I dont give a crap about audiobahn and apparently, the point I was trying to make went way over your head...but let me clarify.....audiogood wrote:Tvrift the three blue led,s aer an symbol of ti amps and subs ... They have always Ben there. Dude get over it. Just so u know audiobahn has never put les in any of there subwoofers . You would know this if you stop haten on them they are known for crome and blue flames .. and if you knew anything about audiobahn you would also know they have 700+ wins in comps ..
MW3 wrote:Sorry for reflection on the plexi its hard to get the right angle when snapping a pic.
The internals are visible through the plexi but its smoked a bit darker than ZPA.
LEDs reside under the plexi, you don't know they are there until you turn on the amp.
i think it was said around the 1200us rangettocs wrote:any idea on the price?
MW3 wrote:Gents,
For the past year, we have been hard at work on an extremely high performance amplifier line.
We will be releasing a new High End amplifier line at CES.
Line contains three models. MSRP is $1200 and up.
Build, conservative power ratings and sonic quality that rivals (and surpasses IMHO) ZPA.
More details to come, enjoy...
Welcome to silicon valley! We likes them devices. They tries to steal it from us.. my preciouss..MW3 wrote:Elite.4 Gut Shot...
Thanks for the kind words Eric. I thought you might like these, perhaps we need to send you one to test.Eric D wrote:Here are some numbers for anyone who might not know what I am talking about.
The original MS2250 is known to be one of the most powerful PG amps of all. It uses 6 TO-247L sized output transistors per channel. These are rated for 150W of thermal capacity. So, as far as output thermal capacity is concerned, 12 of these makes for 1800W on the original MS2250. Now, this is not power output rating, this is the thermal capacity of the devices themselves. They can take bursts of more, and averages of less.
Now, this new PG amp uses 4 MT-200 packaged devices per channel (by the looks of it). These are rated at 200W of thermal capacity. With 16 of these, we are looking at 3200W of thermal capacity. Half of that (2-channels) is down to 1600W. Add in the fact this amp has a fan to keep it cool, and you can get a bit more.
So, based on just the thermal capacity, this amp is similar to a pair of MS2250s in one chassis with one board.
Next, is the power supply section. It is hard to tell, but it looks to be dual power supplies, with 16 MOSFETs in all. This is just a guess. This is the same component count as the ZPA0.5.
Back to output section, the ZPA0.5 uses 24 output devices, all TO-247L sized. However, it runs all of these well under their limits. The ZPA0.5 also does not have the heatsink capacity to get rid of all the heat of 24 devices that large running at their limits.
Without any numbers, I would guess this amp has the resources to be the biggest production full range amp PG has made. Now, if you are crazy like me and would use an original MS2250 to run your components, just run this amp bridged and it will easily beat the MS2250.
April 2012phoenixgold_icy wrote:i hope the new elite comp line will be even or better than the old elite because i need a new one
when do these come out?