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Benefits of a 4 channel amp VS. 2 Channel

Discussion in 'Audio & Video' started by 96Taco, Nov 5, 2012.

  1. Nov 5, 2012 at 9:03 PM
    #1
    96Taco

    96Taco [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Hi guys,

    Been tossing up some ideas in my head on designing a sound system for my car. I was wondering what the benefits are for getting a 4 channel amp vs a 2 channel amp for powering just your 4 speakers. I understand on a 4 channel you can use fader and balance where as on a 2 channel you would probably just have fronts and back fader.

    Why would you want or even need the balance function? I cannot think when you would have the left side turned up higher than the right side?

    Wouldn't just font and back fader be sufficient? What advantage is there to be able to balance as well. I think the only time ive ever used the balance is to check if a speaker is blown without having to put my ear against it.

    Probably an obvious question, but Im pretty new to car audio.

    Thanks.
     
  2. Nov 5, 2012 at 9:52 PM
    #2
    shaneckc

    shaneckc Fyntünd Designs Vendor

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    Well, if you WERE to use a 2 channel amp to power 4 "channels" per say(Front Right, Front Left, Rear Right, Rear Left), you would want the balance option as opposed to the fader. Reason being is that basically in stereo recordings you will have sounds that play between the left and right channel and also independently from one another. Not having a left and right channel would really screw up your imaging (plays a big part in sound quality) and your music would not sound remotely how it's supposed to. Another reason you wouldn't want to do this is because, even if you hooked it up for left and right instead of front and back channels, your front stage and rear fill would put out the same volume. Ideally, you want your front speakers to be the loudest and your rear speakers to provide a hardly noticeable ambient fill. If you already have a 2 channel amp that you want to use, just power your rear speakers off of your radio and pump the extra juice from your amplifier to your front speakers. Make sure to tune your setup carefully to avoid overdriving your speakers and to avoid clipping from the internal amp on your head unit for your rear speakers.
     
  3. Nov 6, 2012 at 12:33 AM
    #3
    brian

    brian Another Traitor

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    Pretty much dead on. Its just wiser to use a 4 channel amp. You start bridging or adding extra impedance to an amp, you increase the chance it will overheat and likely induce clipping. I've done a couple setups like this in my earlier days of the hobby and it just isn't worth it IMO. Buy a 4 channel and go active :D
     
  4. Nov 6, 2012 at 5:35 AM
    #4
    sirsaechao

    sirsaechao Well-Known Member

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    A lift, some wheels, some tires, some performance, some cosmetic and then audio.
    Go 4 and and a sub too. Two channels in stereo for the Mids and Highs and two channel bridged for the sub.
     
  5. Nov 6, 2012 at 10:50 AM
    #5
    Wishbone Runner

    Wishbone Runner Because 4R

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    This is what I rock and it works great, Polk dB6501 in the front, stockers in the rear running off a P4300DVD (will upgrade eventually and need a 6 channel or another amp), and a Polk 10" bridged.
     
  6. Nov 6, 2012 at 10:06 PM
    #6
    96Taco

    96Taco [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Perfect thanks! That puts that idea to bed. I knew there would be an obvious answer that I couldn't see =)

    Guess I will buy a 4 channel amp then.
     
  7. Nov 6, 2012 at 10:13 PM
    #7
    96Taco

    96Taco [OP] Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for the advice guys. Looks like i will get 4 channel plus a mono. Or even a 5 channel if i can get one small enough to fit under the passenger seat. Not sure yet. These look pretty neat too..keeps the factory head unit and converts high outputs to rca for amps. Apparently they really improve the factory hu sound quality.
    http://www.sonicelectronix.com/item_6359_AudioControl-LC6i-Gray-LC6.html
     
  8. Nov 9, 2012 at 8:23 AM
    #8
    81shark

    81shark Well-Known Member

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    5 channel is defiantly worth looking into if you are adding a sub.

    i could be talked into selling you my alpine pdx 5. i keep thinking of upgrading to the next generation.
     
  9. Oct 28, 2018 at 4:06 PM
    #9
    alycia028

    alycia028 Member

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    Did this amp make your stereo significantly louder?
     
  10. Nov 10, 2018 at 9:27 PM
    #10
    Purpleman

    Purpleman Well-Known Member

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    The Kenwood Excelon x801-5 has a small footprint for a 5 channel amp.
     

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