Building a Live PA Rig
Building a Live PA Rig
12:11 on Sunday, February 4, 2007
|
|
|
DreamTheater (29 points)
|
Alright, here goes the technical explanations.
Say I have a Behringer EuroPower EP2500 Power Amp. Specs: 2x1,200W @ 2 ohms; 2,400W @ 4 ohms bridged.
If I wanted to amp Four(4) Peavey PV 215 cabs. Specs: Handles 700W program and 1,400W peak power. 4ohms Nominal Impedance.
Daisy Chaning 2 cabs to each side of the amp would give a 2ohm load, with each cab getting about 600 watts.
Is this correct? Is it safe to run like this, or is there a better way?
I know that there should be more power in the amps than the speakers can handle so distortion doesnt occur, but if I set each speaker to receive about 500 watts, there should be no distortion, giving me about 2000 watts total.
Let me know if I am wrong so that I can finally build my Dream PA system.
|
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
03:14 on Thursday, February 22, 2007
|
|
|
Arande2 (44 points)
|
Ok, I'll just say a few things. The 2-ohm ratings for the EP-2500 are actually more peak measurements at 1khz than acutal RMS output. Depending on what you're playing, you'll actually get more like 6-700 watts out of each channel at 2 ohms (~1300 bridged) depending on what you're playing. This is taking into account the full frequency spectrum and a more continuous measurement.
Wiring 2 cabs to each side in parallel should yield ~350w to each one, however, you have to take into account minimum impedance of the cabs. Running like this can also shorten the life of the amp and lower it's reliability significantly. In the long run, it'd be much more reliable to give each cab it's own amp channel at 4-ohms supplying each amp ~700w based on a reliable 20hz-20khz spec and should be much more satisfying in the long run. This way you can get full performance out of the cabs without damaging them or the amp as quickly.
All in all, I'd recommend 2 amps if you want to do it properly. You could also run each pair in series for each pair at 8 ohms, then run those pairs in parallel to 1 amp for 4 ohms bridged, although that'd be the same as what you described, except the amp would have more woofer control. I'd still recommend using 2 though, but probably the last setup would be fine.
The reason I know this is because I'm considering (most likely will be) using the EP2500 as an amp for my Infinite Baffle with 4 FI Q18's. The way the cabs are rated, they'll take 350rms, 700program, 1400peak. One amp should be able to provide the watts if you aren't interested in dynamics as much as volume.
I'd run them (like I said) with one pair in series and the other in series, then run that pair of paired cabs in parallel for max woofer control (sound quality without losing volume). Did I explain it well enough? Neither of the specs are totally up to snuff and so they should go together well.
|
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
13:42 on Thursday, February 22, 2007
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
21:56 on Saturday, February 24, 2007
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
15:39 on Sunday, February 25, 2007
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
15:40 on Sunday, February 25, 2007
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
16:46 on Sunday, February 25, 2007
|
|
|
Re: Building a Live PA Rig
11:29 on Monday, February 26, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
|