Bi-Amp S60's or not with Sony STRDN1080
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Posts: 2
Hi All, I am looking for some guidance on how to eek the most out of these great towers. The DN1080 is rated at 165WPC 6-ohm to 1 Driver. I current have them bi-amped to the receiver. I assumed this would be appropriate considering their is 3 woofers and powering them with one amp would not be taking full advantage of the speakers. Feel free to correct me on any of this - any guidance is greatly appreciated.
Is this a safe set up for these towers? Should I skip the bi-amp and revert it back to stock with the metal jumper plate/single wiring? Will I sacrifice output or sound quality if I do this ( I know its all up to what sounds better to me but I'm looking for general advice). Bonus question that's receiver specific - what is my actual output to these speakers considering there is 3 drivers and the receiver rating is referencing output to one driver(165WPC to 1 driver).
Feel free to correct me on any of this - any guidance is greatly appreciated.
Is this a safe set up for these towers? Should I skip the bi-amp and revert it back to stock with the metal jumper plate/single wiring? Will I sacrifice output or sound quality if I do this ( I know its all up to what sounds better to me but I'm looking for general advice). Bonus question that's receiver specific - what is my actual output to these speakers considering there is 3 drivers and the receiver rating is referencing output to one driver(165WPC to 1 driver).
Feel free to correct me on any of this - any guidance is greatly appreciated.
Comments
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We recently (in the last month) had a post similar to this. Search for it.
The general consensus here seems to be that Biamping with an AVR doesn't work (up to AVR's should NEVER be used for music). But I say try it and listen for yourself. Sounds like you are already set up for Biamping so listen for a while and switch it back. All you need to do is swap 2 cables.
Report back if there is a difference. -
It isn’t bi-amping, as an AVR has only one power supply and generally not a very good one. There will be no sonic improvements made from doing so.
Your information here is wrong. 165WPC 6-ohm to 1 Driver makes no sense. Receivers divide their power into channels, with each channel being one speaker. It does not matter how many drivers a speaker has. Your Sony sees it as one speaker..The Gear... Carver "Statement" Mono-blocks, Mcintosh C2300 Arcam AVR20, Oppo UDP-203 4K Blu-ray player, Sony XBR70x850B 4k, Polk Audio Legend L800 with height modules, L400 Center Channel Polk audio AB800 "in-wall" surrounds. Marantz MM7025 stereo amp. Simaudio Moon 680d DSD
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Welcome to Club Polk.
You would be better off skipping the bi-amp since all you really doing is putting more strain on the power supply, which can be stressed enough with the speakers.
How many speakers are you running, if it is just the S60's your Sony might be putting out the 100wpc that it states it has. If you are running a full 5.1 channel system, then you are lucky if you are getting 80wpc to each speaker.
I overstated. Here are the bench test results.
Test Bench
Two channels driven continuously into 8-ohm loads:
0.1% distortion at 98.9 watts
1% distortion at 121.4 watts
Five channels driven continuously into 8-ohm loads:
0.1% distortion at 66.2 watts
1% distortion at 90.7 watts
Seven channels driven continuously into 8-ohm loads:
0.1% distortion at 64.4 watts 1% distortion at 75.5 watts
If you can/are willing to do so, you can get a new receiver from Marantz, Denon etc. that has more power, and more importantly has preamp outputs to get a separate amplifier to give those S60s all the power that they want to operate to their full potential. Something like this would be better
https://www.crutchfield.com/p_642SR6012/Marantz-SR6012.html
Then you will hear what these great speakers can do. I know because I have a pair myself.
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Don’t bother bi-amping with an avr. Replace the brass jumpers with small pieces of speaker wire. Easy cheap upgrade.Living Room
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like thisrburgess714 wrote: »Don’t bother bi-amping with an avr. Replace the brass jumpers with small pieces of speaker wire. Easy cheap upgrade.
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