


Massive high current 1200VA toroidal power transformerĪll Channels Driven Output Power, Stereo mode RMS:ĥ0 watts per channel, 12 channels 8 ohmsħ5 watts per channel, 12 channels 4 ohmsġ00 watts per channel, 6 channels 8 ohms bridgedħ8 watts per channel, 12 channels 8 ohmsġ15 watts per channel, 12 channels 4 ohmsĢ24 watts per channel, 6 channels 8 ohms bridged Localized filter capacitors right at power stage - improved dynamic power, lower IM distortion
#Sonance amp full#
Total energy storage of 180,000 uF for low distortion 20Hz bass at full power x 12 channels But I would like to know the differences in the amps. Or I could save some money and purchase the Sonos Amp. The reality is I would have to purchase the Sonos port if I was to use the SR2-125. Thanks, but looking at more specific specs then the obvious. 65.00 Sonance Sonamp 260 Power Amplifier No Remote ElectronicsRecycledCom 124.99 Sonance Sonamp 260 Stereo Audio Power Amplifier 45.00 Sonance Sonamp 260 Home Theater Stereo Power Amplifier 625W 99. Protection circuit for each pair of amplifiers, can bridge to six channels with full protection Sonos amp contains a streamer, the Sonance does not and needs a source. No overprotect clipping due to IC amplifier internally set current limitingĮight section power supply- six power amp, one low level audio, one protection circuitry Temperature protected by thermal sensors on each heat sink Six discrete high current power supplies, each individually fused (six discrete stereo amps)ĭiscrete Transistor Output - Ability to drive low impedance systems (4 ohms bridged)Īdjustable Auto-On signal triggering with Auto-On bypass switchīridging of all 12 output channels into six channels at 100 w/channel Maximum THD+N less than 0.03% from 20Hz to 20kHz at any load (<.01% nominal)
#Sonance amp series#
We ship same day M-F and before noon Monday on weekends. The Sonamp 275 SE from Sonance is an exceptionally well built amplifier with enough high current power to support almost any home audio application. Sonance Landscape Series is a totally scalable outdoor speaker system that delivers perfectly even volume coverage and unbelievable sound quality throughout any size space. There are a few small scratches in the paint but nothing that's major. Thoughts? Comments? Anything will help, including opinions on the Sonos VP speakers.This is a great condition Sonance amplifier that performs and sounds excellent. A separate amp will run the Sonos VPSUB (or pair of VPSUB’s). I’m thinking the best setup is to bridge one pair for 100W RO the center channel (Sonos Reference R1), then the other 10 channels run the other 10 speakers.

(2) If I don’t use all 12 channels on the Sonamp, will the amp be able to use all 600W over fewer channels? I think I could bridge each L/R pair and have 100W over 6 channels, but what if I used 7 channels, would the amp be able to do 85.7W per channel, or is each channel individually amplified? (1) If the speakers (a mix of Sonance VP48 Rectangles, VP46 Rectangles, VP46R for height) are rated at 5W min and 100W max, is 50W from the Sonamp a good power rating to run the speakers? If the speaker (R1 for the center channel) is rated 5W min to 150W max, can the Sonamp power it efficiently? I’m building a 7.2.4 Atmos system and will get a separate amp for the sub(s), but for the non-sub speakers I’m curious about 2 things. Hi everyone, I’m debating getting an 11-Channel AVR (built-in amp) or getting a pre-pro with pre-amp outs and using a Sonance Sonamp 12-50 to power each speaker.
