MisterZ
Ouija - Mystifying Oracle
Hi all,
Over the weekend I came across a little hole-in-the-wall second hand shop not expecting to find anything in particular but you never know. This place looked like a store full of Garage sales with plenty of well-used furniture and "stuff", most of it pretty scruffy. On a shelf is something that catches my eye...a Crown D150. I've used a D75 in the distant past (and didn't care to know the specifics, only that it worked in the system I had access to) but the "Crown" script on this one is Old School. It's a straight up power amp and it's heavy as in 20+ lbs. It's sitting behind a pair of DIY Monkey Coffins that look like somebody's Home-brew version of Realistic Mach 1's.
The guy running the place says he knows what it is but can't test it AND he has no idea where it came from (I'm guessing it's a consignment arrangement at this place). It shows signs of being rack mounted - no faceplate but no rack mount ears either - only a drilled and tapped hole in an odd place nowhere near any components - so we work out an agreeable price ($50.00). I've got 24 hours to return it if it's dead. The apparent age of the thing has me a little concerned but I decide to give it a chance. looks just like this one:
I get it home,pop the covers and blow out what little dust is in the unit. No metal shavings...no burning smell I can detect. I get some adapters out and run an MP3 player to it, hook it up to a pair of Boston Acoustic a120's and I'm getting faint sound from one channel. I have a SAE PA-10 pre-amp and hook it up to switch/attenuate the player, some more fiddling and it sounds better. Just when I think I'm looking at am amp with one dead channel, I check the gain pots and after an adjustment, both channels clean and clear...I bring the volume up slowly and it sounds VERY nice...So I'm VERY Happy. I've only listened to it for a half an hour and I haven't noticed anything questionable at all. The heat sinks got maybe a few degree above room temperature and I was playing it maybe a bit loud for 10 minutes or so.
The questions I have are these:
1. Given the age of this amp (I'm assuming it's late 60's or early 70's vintage...no faceplate, though), is there anything I should be mindful of that is more likely to "go" in the area of capacitors?
2. The 75wpc this amp is stated to be capable of was enough to make one of the speakers have a loud "pop" at 1/2 volume (not trying THAT again). What loudspeakers would be a better pairing for this amp IF it were to be used at higher volumes for perhaps extended periods of time? My wife DOES have a "Drive it like you stole it" habit with gear occasionally...Wants to hear Concert recordings and Electronica/Trance LOUD. I have a pair of A/D/S L570's. Is this too much amp for them?
3. I'm a neophyte when it comes to amplifier "Class". The literature states that the D150 is a Class "A/B-B" and this is, from what I can tell this far something unique to Crown. What are the advantages of this type compared to Class "A", Class "D" and so forth? Can someone explain it in layman's terms? Is this amp better suited for Audio Reinforcement than HiFi?
4. As far as a Pre-Amp goes, I have that SAE PA-10 but I don't know if its "Consumer" nature plays well with this amp insofar as the strength of the signal it is outputting goes. I'm reading the amp should have 1.2 Volts fed to it and in my past experience with car audio I know some head units have 3 Volt outputs. What advantages/disadvantages are there to having a higher level fed to the amp (I'm assuming it's primarily to achieve higher SPL)? Is there some kind of standard level associated with commercial gear in this regard versus consumer home gear?
I apologize in advance for the long list of questions. I've read a fair amount about people's opinions of the D150 but most of the commentary has to do with later models having volume controls which I'm reading are built a bit differently than the one I have. Any and all pointers and help greatly appreciated...opinions as well.
Thanks
Over the weekend I came across a little hole-in-the-wall second hand shop not expecting to find anything in particular but you never know. This place looked like a store full of Garage sales with plenty of well-used furniture and "stuff", most of it pretty scruffy. On a shelf is something that catches my eye...a Crown D150. I've used a D75 in the distant past (and didn't care to know the specifics, only that it worked in the system I had access to) but the "Crown" script on this one is Old School. It's a straight up power amp and it's heavy as in 20+ lbs. It's sitting behind a pair of DIY Monkey Coffins that look like somebody's Home-brew version of Realistic Mach 1's.
The guy running the place says he knows what it is but can't test it AND he has no idea where it came from (I'm guessing it's a consignment arrangement at this place). It shows signs of being rack mounted - no faceplate but no rack mount ears either - only a drilled and tapped hole in an odd place nowhere near any components - so we work out an agreeable price ($50.00). I've got 24 hours to return it if it's dead. The apparent age of the thing has me a little concerned but I decide to give it a chance. looks just like this one:
I get it home,pop the covers and blow out what little dust is in the unit. No metal shavings...no burning smell I can detect. I get some adapters out and run an MP3 player to it, hook it up to a pair of Boston Acoustic a120's and I'm getting faint sound from one channel. I have a SAE PA-10 pre-amp and hook it up to switch/attenuate the player, some more fiddling and it sounds better. Just when I think I'm looking at am amp with one dead channel, I check the gain pots and after an adjustment, both channels clean and clear...I bring the volume up slowly and it sounds VERY nice...So I'm VERY Happy. I've only listened to it for a half an hour and I haven't noticed anything questionable at all. The heat sinks got maybe a few degree above room temperature and I was playing it maybe a bit loud for 10 minutes or so.
The questions I have are these:
1. Given the age of this amp (I'm assuming it's late 60's or early 70's vintage...no faceplate, though), is there anything I should be mindful of that is more likely to "go" in the area of capacitors?
2. The 75wpc this amp is stated to be capable of was enough to make one of the speakers have a loud "pop" at 1/2 volume (not trying THAT again). What loudspeakers would be a better pairing for this amp IF it were to be used at higher volumes for perhaps extended periods of time? My wife DOES have a "Drive it like you stole it" habit with gear occasionally...Wants to hear Concert recordings and Electronica/Trance LOUD. I have a pair of A/D/S L570's. Is this too much amp for them?
3. I'm a neophyte when it comes to amplifier "Class". The literature states that the D150 is a Class "A/B-B" and this is, from what I can tell this far something unique to Crown. What are the advantages of this type compared to Class "A", Class "D" and so forth? Can someone explain it in layman's terms? Is this amp better suited for Audio Reinforcement than HiFi?
4. As far as a Pre-Amp goes, I have that SAE PA-10 but I don't know if its "Consumer" nature plays well with this amp insofar as the strength of the signal it is outputting goes. I'm reading the amp should have 1.2 Volts fed to it and in my past experience with car audio I know some head units have 3 Volt outputs. What advantages/disadvantages are there to having a higher level fed to the amp (I'm assuming it's primarily to achieve higher SPL)? Is there some kind of standard level associated with commercial gear in this regard versus consumer home gear?
I apologize in advance for the long list of questions. I've read a fair amount about people's opinions of the D150 but most of the commentary has to do with later models having volume controls which I'm reading are built a bit differently than the one I have. Any and all pointers and help greatly appreciated...opinions as well.
Thanks