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The TBI sub amp is a little different than most because each of the high-level inputs has a resistance of 300 ohms between them and to chassis ground so there is no chance that the negative terminals of the T-amp will short to each other or to ground. If you don't completely trust this you can always put a series capacitor in each line coming from the outputs of the amplifier that go to the high-level inputs of the sub amp. A film type is best, and should be somewhere between 100 uF and 200 uF -- with values near 100 uF you will start to roll off the sub-sonic frequencies, which could be a useful thing if you're getting rumble feedback from a turntable.I ran the outputs of an original Sonic Impact T-amp directly into a Magellan 200su sub amp with no problem. I never tried it with my Clari-T, but it is basically the same thing as far as the sub amp issue goes.I suspect that most sub amps are not like this, so if you own something other than a TBI, you should check with the amp manufacturer to make sure there is at least 300 ohms from each terminal to ground, and between themselves.There is a link on Vinnie's web site which explains the benefits of SLA battery power.Good luck,Jim
Hi Don,I moved this post to the two-channel audio forum because it does not involve a Red Wine Audio product, and it will be benefitial for more exposure to others over here (I'm sure there are lots of SI T-Amp users around here).jrebman did a nice job answering your questions (thanks, Jim!). Best regards,Vinnie
Oh dear . After reading your post I quickly switched the sub off if only because I am in no way technically minded and had no understanding of what you said. This is the sub I bought albeit a rather earlier version(mk1):https://www.bkelec.com/HiFi/Sub_Woofers/XLS200-DF.htmThe top left hand side has the high level input I use and has a special dedicated cable which connects to the T amp lft /rt and one of the negatives
Quote from: Don Maico on 5 Dec 2006, 08:17 pmOh dear . After reading your post I quickly switched the sub off if only because I am in no way technically minded and had no understanding of what you said. This is the sub I bought albeit a rather earlier version(mk1):https://www.bkelec.com/HiFi/Sub_Woofers/XLS200-DF.htmThe top left hand side has the high level input I use and has a special dedicated cable which connects to the T amp lft /rt and one of the negativesHi Don,Switching off the sub is not the same as disconnecting the T-amp from it. Did you disconnect the T-amp from the sub? Best regards,Vinnie
Since the T-amp does not have volume controlled RCA output jacks (to feed the RCA inputs of your sub), you can either have it modded for this, or you might want to try something like this:http://www.tnt-audio.com/ampli/t-preamp_e.htmlUse an RCA splitter to split the volume controlled RCA output between the low-level inputs of your sub and your T-Amp. Set the T-Amps volume control to max. If it gets loud too quickly on the preamp's volume control, you can cut back the gain of the T-Amp but reducing its volume.
Why not two small subs instead of one? That really would be a giant killer.