I have this power amplifier. Do you people remember power amps and pre-amps? Back in the 1980s I had this “stereo amplifier” which meant the power amp and the pre-amp were in the same box. On mine there was even a set of “jumper” devices that connected the pre-amp to the power amp, on the rear side of the amp. Back then if you were really serious about your music, you bought your power amp and pre-amp as separate devices. I have no idea why that was better. Never bought mine that way. My “combined” amp sounded fine.
I thought all this was “old” technology, but evidently you can still find separate power amps. And so it is that I find myself in possession of one, and a new one at that. The instruction book says to connect your pre-amp or other source to the line in, then connect speakers and away you go. It's the “other source” bit that has me intrigued. Can the “other source” be the audio out from my computer? I have my computer's audio currently connected to the line in of one of those “home theater receivers”, which is, for this purpose, a combined pre/power amp.
The line in connectors on the back of the power amp are the same RCA connectors that are found on the back of the receiver, so it should work, right? Except now there is no “pre-amp” in the system. What the heck is a pre-amp anyway? The entire phrase makes no sense. Power amp makes sense, it amplifies the signal (power) so it can be sent out to the speakers. But a pre-amp can't be amplifying “pre”. Sounds a lot like “pre-determine” which makes about as much sense as pre-eating your breakfast.
I thought all this was “old” technology, but evidently you can still find separate power amps. And so it is that I find myself in possession of one, and a new one at that. The instruction book says to connect your pre-amp or other source to the line in, then connect speakers and away you go. It's the “other source” bit that has me intrigued. Can the “other source” be the audio out from my computer? I have my computer's audio currently connected to the line in of one of those “home theater receivers”, which is, for this purpose, a combined pre/power amp.
The line in connectors on the back of the power amp are the same RCA connectors that are found on the back of the receiver, so it should work, right? Except now there is no “pre-amp” in the system. What the heck is a pre-amp anyway? The entire phrase makes no sense. Power amp makes sense, it amplifies the signal (power) so it can be sent out to the speakers. But a pre-amp can't be amplifying “pre”. Sounds a lot like “pre-determine” which makes about as much sense as pre-eating your breakfast.