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Right. And I sold my $16k Class A mono blocks in favor of the NC400's.
What ever! The Ncores were dull and flat in comparison. I have no interest in belittling Ncore amps but they did not cut the mustard in my system. My Pass X250 was light years better. The AVA 400R is also a huge step up so much so that my friend who is a member of AC bought the 400R to run with his Magnepan 1.7's and the ncores are sitting on a shelf waiting to be sold!Maybe in your system the Ncores shine.
The Harman Drive Core amplifier chip is a completely in-house design done through Crown engineering. The only thing we used TI for was their expertise in IC Chip manufacturing. There are several patents on the chip design, although the basic topology is a Class D output stage. The Drive Core technology is used in several places, including the Lexicon DD-8, and several Crown amplifiers. There are 2 chips, one is a complete amp on a chip that includes an output stage that is capable of delivering 75 - 150 watts into 8ohms (depending on power supply and application requirements) and is table to 2 ohms, and the only thing that is really needed is a power supply and an input stage. The first use of the technology was in the Lexus LFA supercar. The requirements were high output, small size, high efficiency (greater then 90%), and great sound. Moving the input and output stages onto a single IC allowed much tiger tolerances of the clock and triangle wave form generator that is the heart of all digital amp designs, and often the cause of the "Class D" sound some people don't like. There is also a version that is everything without the high output stage (the input, waveform generator, feedback circuit, etc...) that can me used to drive higher output stages either Class D or our patented Class I, where more then 150 watts is needed.thanks for the interest,Todd PackerHarman Luxury Audio GroupField Application Engineer
What ever! The Ncores were dull and flat in comparison. I have no interest in belittling Ncore amps but they did not cut the mustard in my system. My Pass X250 was light years better. The AVA 400R is also a huge step up so much so that my friend who is a member of AC bought the 400R to run with his Magnepan 1.7's and the ncores are sitting on a shelf waiting to be sold!
From the What's Best forum 2011:Also very lengthy thread on DriveCore here:http://www.hometheaterequipment.com/mono-stereo-amps-59/crown-audio-xls-drivecore-series-amplifier-official-thread-1319/Seems the XLS 2000 has a lower noise floor so should be the base model for audiophiles...
Noise is the bane of Class D. It needs to be extremely low or it's no good.
So what does that prove? The speakers are VERY different. Measuring amps into resistors will not tell one much about the sonic attributes of the amp into any given speaker load. So, if you like the Ncore better with your speakers, that's cool. It's also cool that someone else was not happy with NCore on their speakers.
I'm not trying to prove anything. It's strictly saying that what works for one might not work for another.
The one issue with class D is they can be "tweaky" and respond strongly to the rest of the system, including cables and AC power.***
***When I sell cables***
Yeah, footers on class D amps (and power distribution) make a larger difference than I would have ever expected.
Dave could you elaborate on the type of power distribution you are referring to?Thanks,Chris