Click to view our Accessibility Statement or contact us with accessibility-related questions

Setting aside that this is not even close to a 300 watt per channel amp and you neglect to state what the distortion levels are at full power or what the power output is at what most consider an acceptable level of distortion, my question is whether the AUX Out is fixed or variable since you don't explicitly state which. You show that it can be connected to an active speaker or subwoofer which implies it's variable which is what makes the most sense to most people. But I've seen too many of these amps labeling a fixed Line Out as a Pre-Out which is not the same thing. So, which is it?

more_vert
100% upvoted
1
1

Cancel
search
close
ChiChiChicago
0
Aug 21, 2024
I agree that they should list distortion at both full power and also at at least 1kHz, which covers the gamut and would be considered widely acceptable from a benchmark perspective. BUT it is feasible that this pushes the wattage. I did a quick search on the supposed product image that shows a TPA3255 chip/amp and op-amp NE5532P, which does correlate to a Texas Instruments class D amp capable of 600 watts mono and 315 watts stereo with .006 HD at 1kHz, and a Texas Instruments op-amp respectively. Whether that's whats actually in the black box, or could be produced profitably at this cost, or tests significantly worse fully bandwidth/power, or the signal path has been compromised somewhere along the way in its execution, or whatever may be the case - I haven't the slightest. But it's possible. ;)
Related Posts
Trending Posts in Audiophile