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T-Amps for car audio?
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<blockquote data-quote="SlugButter" data-source="post: 8747346" data-attributes="member: 678073"><p>Hispl is right. I messed around with this when I ordered a ton of stuff to build my own home stereo, and it wasn’t cost effective. I have a build log somewhere on here doing this with a little 8 inch sub for my Jeep. I was trying to create a system similar to the infinity basslink. This would also be a regulated power supply, meaning that no matter how much voltage is coming in at the input, the output will remain constant, as opposed to how car amplifiers normally run, which is an unregulated power supply, so when you supply higher voltage you get higher watts on the amplified end to the speakers. The input side of the power supply will have a dynamic range of power coming in on a boost converter, depending on what the amplifier board is needing at the moment, but the output side will always remain the same. You will lose way too much power in the form of heat to make this type of power supply efficient enough to run in a 12 volt environment. These amp boards work great when converting 120 volts ac power into 70 volts dc power (or whatever volts the amp board works at), as they were designed to do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SlugButter, post: 8747346, member: 678073"] Hispl is right. I messed around with this when I ordered a ton of stuff to build my own home stereo, and it wasn’t cost effective. I have a build log somewhere on here doing this with a little 8 inch sub for my Jeep. I was trying to create a system similar to the infinity basslink. This would also be a regulated power supply, meaning that no matter how much voltage is coming in at the input, the output will remain constant, as opposed to how car amplifiers normally run, which is an unregulated power supply, so when you supply higher voltage you get higher watts on the amplified end to the speakers. The input side of the power supply will have a dynamic range of power coming in on a boost converter, depending on what the amplifier board is needing at the moment, but the output side will always remain the same. You will lose way too much power in the form of heat to make this type of power supply efficient enough to run in a 12 volt environment. These amp boards work great when converting 120 volts ac power into 70 volts dc power (or whatever volts the amp board works at), as they were designed to do. [/QUOTE]
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T-Amps for car audio?
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