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Now, regarding these Crown amps, would like to more. Every Class D amp I've owned or heard/auditioned had issues with sounding 2D, lacked a bit of bass, and sounded a bit off in the presence region. OTOH, the high power and clarity is very welcome with a lot of music.
It is nice to have the option to lower it or crank it up. 9 0'clock setting gives me about 20-25 WPC on my 85db Zellatons.. 12 o'clock and it is more like 75-100 WPC. I will never use the 375 WPC.
No 2D on my Zellatons. I have a very wide soundstage and lots of depth. The Zellatons totally disappear.
So, you are only using a fraction of the power. How does the Crown compare to the Job 225? More importantly, is it STILL as good with the gain wide open? (I suspect not.) The reason I'm asking is that some of us have speakers that are 85 db/w, and while the extra power is always welcome, it may lose some of it's better qualities with the higher gain setting.
I cranked it up to 1 o'clock tonight, much louder than I normally listen. No hardness or AC harshness at all. The SQ surprised me again, I have about 200 hours on it. I played quite a few of my bad recordings and they were much, much better sounding, more open with a bigger soundstage and no harshness. So the amp must be breaking in even more. My Zellatons are 85db so no worries on the volume, Keith.Crown is just more quiet, detailed and clearer than the Job. I still might keep the Job, not sure.
Tom, you are leaving it on 24/7 correct?Scotty
I decided to do some research on these Crown amps. I thought maybe they were fresh and new but they won a lot of rewards at the CES show Jan. 10. The amps were shipped April of that year, here is the notice.http://harmanprogroup.blogspot.com/2010/04/crown-begins-shipping-highly.htmlIn the article, Harmon states that they included a power conditioner in the amps so you do not have to use a separate line conditioner. That must be the reason I am enjoying this amp at such a loud volume and no hardness. All other class D amps I have had here sounded very harsh.Harmon has very deep pockets. Most of you probably know, but here is a list of their companies that they own beside Levinson.http://www.harman.com/EN-US/Solutions/Harmanbrands/Pages/MarkLevinson.aspxActually, Dave and I are almost 5 years late on finding what this amp sounds like. Since these amps has been out for almost 5 years, the coming CES show in Jan. just might see Harmon introducing a new lineup of the amps. So keep a close watch.
All SMPS include a "built in power conditioner", especially the high power ones used in most class D amplifiers. The power filtration has to be included to keep the SMPS from putting huge amounts of noise back onto the AC line. Without this power filtration, the amplifiers would not pass FCC (in the US) and CE (which is even stricter, in the EU) regulations. I highly doubt that the power filtration included in the Crown amplifiers is anything special in comparison to other SMPS equipped class D options. Certainly nothing in the pictures looks very special in comparison to Hypex SMPS designs, or the ICEpower modules I am familiar with.
Please stop trying to use logic in this conversation! :wink:I admittedly have not heard these amps but look forward to auditioning them in the future. In my experience, cheap Class D amps deliver lots of watts but lack refinement and sound very 2D as others have pointed out. All class D amps require conditioning and, as you stated, they all have it built in. The pro Crown looks to be suited for a supwoofer application and I'm excited about the prospect of replacing my current pro amp (Crown K1) and Behringer DCX with the Crown and using the internal Xover. I'm less hopeful of replacing my NCore amps with the Crown if it's anything like the other pro, Class D amps I have heard in the past. Time will tell...
jackman, do you find the highs to be correct and not missing anything and the stage to be 3d with the NCores in your experience?