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Junior Varsity
Behringer iNUKE NU6000 amplifier
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<blockquote data-quote="Ron Kimball" data-source="post: 31441" data-attributes="member: 405"><p>Re: Behringer iNUKE NU6000 amplifier</p><p></p><p>Well, since the outlet can only supply 20 amps at 110 volts = 2200 watts how can it supply more? No amp I know of avoids the laws of physics.</p><p></p><p>Now as for the "peak" rating, there's two kinds of those - peak rms and peak power. The former is the maximum sinewave power the amp can supply for a short time and the latter the peak voltage it can supply into the minimum rated load resistance squared divided by the minimum load resistance. Both are interesting things to know but the former is the more "legitimate" measure of the amp's performance. BTW for sub duty with typical music a 5000 watt class "D" amp is about the biggest you can run fully loaded at full boogie off a single 110V 20A circuit without it either blowing the breaker or the amp limiting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ron Kimball, post: 31441, member: 405"] Re: Behringer iNUKE NU6000 amplifier Well, since the outlet can only supply 20 amps at 110 volts = 2200 watts how can it supply more? No amp I know of avoids the laws of physics. Now as for the "peak" rating, there's two kinds of those - peak rms and peak power. The former is the maximum sinewave power the amp can supply for a short time and the latter the peak voltage it can supply into the minimum rated load resistance squared divided by the minimum load resistance. Both are interesting things to know but the former is the more "legitimate" measure of the amp's performance. BTW for sub duty with typical music a 5000 watt class "D" amp is about the biggest you can run fully loaded at full boogie off a single 110V 20A circuit without it either blowing the breaker or the amp limiting. [/QUOTE]
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Behringer iNUKE NU6000 amplifier
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