Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,582
Default What size amp would I need?

I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????

I have a 10" speaker and a 4 or 6" speaker, that I removed from
1930's record player, mounted to a suitable piece of chip board,
covered with grill cloth (well, tan-colored burlap that a roommate had
once used to cover the walls in his room) , and held to the wall and
ceiling with hand-made molding. (not as fancy as it sounds.) I"m
using the original crossover device (a single capacitor iirc. ) It
gives a very nice sound. .

(It's been 30 years since I nailed all this to the wall, so I don't
remember some details.

Thanks again.
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 379
Default What size amp would I need?

I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)


Beware of power ratings... or, at least, know what you're getting
based on how the power rating is given.

It's been common for years to find amps and receivers marketed with
extremely unrealistic power ratings... the classic example being the
kind of amp which advertises "100 watts peak music power" but is
driven from a wall-wart that might deliver 5 watts for a few seconds
before overheating.

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????


That's a good recipe for a fried amplifier, in many cases. Any
mismatch between the two amplifier sides, *or* between the signals fed
into the two channels will result in the two sections fighting with
one another... one trying to pull the output voltage up, the other
trying just as hard to pull it down. Each side will look like a dead
short, or worse, to the other.

All it takes is one glitch, and all of the Magic Blue Smoke leaks out.
Unless an amp is specifically designed and advertised as being able to
handle this sort of parallel configuration, don't do it.

That being said... it's hard to give you a good answer to your
question without knowing much more about the speakers you are planning
to use, any enclosures, the volume level you want to run, the sort of
program material you want to play, etc.

As a general rule of thumb, I'd guess that an honest 10-watt amplifier
would likely give you as much volume as you'd want in this sort of
application, unless your existing wall/ceiling speakers are extremely
inefficient.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,833
Default What size amp would I need?

A true 5W -- that is, the amp can produce a continuous average power of 5W at
low distortion -- should be more than enough.

I have large planar speakers, and you be amazed at how little power they need
to play relatively loudly -- just a few watts.

  #4   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,415
Default What size amp would I need?

micky wrote:
I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????

I have a 10" speaker and a 4 or 6" speaker, that I removed from
1930's record player, mounted to a suitable piece of chip board,
covered with grill cloth (well, tan-colored burlap that a roommate had
once used to cover the walls in his room) , and held to the wall and
ceiling with hand-made molding. (not as fancy as it sounds.) I"m
using the original crossover device (a single capacitor iirc. ) It
gives a very nice sound. .

(It's been 30 years since I nailed all this to the wall, so I don't
remember some details.

Thanks again.


http://www.ebay.com/itm/Optimus-SA-1...item2c6bef95cc

Greg
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,415
Default What size amp would I need?

gregz wrote:
micky wrote:
I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????

I have a 10" speaker and a 4 or 6" speaker, that I removed from
1930's record player, mounted to a suitable piece of chip board,
covered with grill cloth (well, tan-colored burlap that a roommate had
once used to cover the walls in his room) , and held to the wall and
ceiling with hand-made molding. (not as fancy as it sounds.) I"m
using the original crossover device (a single capacitor iirc. ) It
gives a very nice sound. .

(It's been 30 years since I nailed all this to the wall, so I don't
remember some details.

Thanks again.


http://www.ebay.com/itm/Optimus-SA-1...item2c6bef95cc

Greg


http://www.ebay.com/itm/RADIO-SHACK-...item589b59149c

Greg


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,582
Default What size amp would I need?

On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 15:28:40 -0800, (Dave Platt)
wrote:

I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)


Beware of power ratings... or, at least, know what you're getting
based on how the power rating is given.

It's been common for years to find amps and receivers marketed with
extremely unrealistic power ratings... the classic example being the
kind of amp which advertises "100 watts peak music power" but is
driven from a wall-wart that might deliver 5 watts for a few seconds
before overheating.


LOL. I'll pay attention to that. After I read your post, I noticed
that the Radio Shack amp that gregz recommended said it used 25 watts
input, but each channel had only 1.8 watts RMS. output.

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????


That's a good recipe for a fried amplifier, in many cases. Any
mismatch between the two amplifier sides,


FTR. so even an amp with supposedly identical sides might have some
mismatch that would cause a failure.

*or* between the signals fed
into the two channels


In this case it would be the very same monaural audio output from the
tv, and only a bad solder joint by me could make the two signals
unequal. Might that be enough to damage the amp.

will result in the two sections fighting with
one another... one trying to pull the output voltage up, the other
trying just as hard to pull it down. Each side will look like a dead
short, or worse, to the other.

All it takes is one glitch, and all of the Magic Blue Smoke leaks out.
Unless an amp is specifically designed and advertised as being able to
handle this sort of parallel configuration, don't do it.


Okay.

That being said... it's hard to give you a good answer to your
question without knowing much more about the speakers you are planning
to use,


Two speakers from the 1930's, one 10" and one 6 or 4"

any enclosures,


It's a rectangle about 2 feet by 1 footf set at a 45^ angle to the
ceiling and the wall, and flush against the wall to the left. Open at
t he right. I never got around to putting the side on the
enclosure, because I didn't make provitsions to attach the side in the
first place, and it r equires putting a ladder in the bathtub. And
the sound is good enough.

the volume level you want to run,


Low I guess, because a) the rooom is small: b) the walls are either
sheet rock or tile and there is the toilet, the sink, and the door but
nothing soft like curtains. to absorb the sound, and c) for 25 years
I used to run these speakers right off the earphone jack of the
previous TV, which was a 12" B&W, tube TV** (not just the CRT, but
about 6 or 7 tubes) .

**I paid $2 for it at a yard sale, it was 10 maybe even 20
0 years old then, and it ran for 25 more years without giving any
trouble. It was "instant on" becaue they ran half-wave rectified
current through the filamnts when the TV was off.

the sort of
program material you want to play, etc.


No concerts, just tv sitcoms and dramas, the Evening News (such as it
is.) and Jeopardy.

As a general rule of thumb, I'd guess that an honest 10-watt amplifier
would likely give you as much volume as you'd want in this sort of
application, unless your existing wall/ceiling speakers are extremely
inefficient.


They were typical speakers of the 1930's, but I don't know what that
means. In the 70's I lived in an apartment building with several
women in their 80's. So they had bought these things new, and now
they were moving to what's almost as good as what's now called
assisted living, although smaller, and they had no room for their
radios, especially if part of it was broken. One end-table radio
was from 1930 and it broke in 1940 and hadn't been turned on since
then. She gave it to me in 1980 and I turned it on and it played
beautifully. Unfortunately I haven't been able to get it run since
that first time. (IIRC, I touched a screwdriver blade to a (anode?)
cap on one of the tubes, but that only worked that one time.

Another woman gave me her husband's blackjack. He had been a military
sentry in the Spanish American war. Most of the leather covering had
falled off already, but at the time, before my mother gave me some of
my granparents stuff (pots, a pillow) , it was the oldest thing I
owned.

Thanks, and if you managed to read this far, thanks again!
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,582
Default What size amp would I need?

On Fri, 1 Feb 2013 02:22:06 +0000 (UTC), gregz
wrote:

gregz wrote:
micky wrote:
I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

Now I'm ready to buy one but my question is, What size amp would I
need? They ran from 5 watts to 14 watts and more. (The input will
come from he earphone jack on the TV.)

And I presume I can take a stereo amp and connect the sides in
parallel, if I keep polarity the same????

I have a 10" speaker and a 4 or 6" speaker, that I removed from
1930's record player, mounted to a suitable piece of chip board,
covered with grill cloth (well, tan-colored burlap that a roommate had
once used to cover the walls in his room) , and held to the wall and
ceiling with hand-made molding. (not as fancy as it sounds.) I"m
using the original crossover device (a single capacitor iirc. ) It
gives a very nice sound. .

(It's been 30 years since I nailed all this to the wall, so I don't
remember some details.

Thanks again.


http://www.ebay.com/itm/Optimus-SA-1...item2c6bef95cc

Greg


http://www.ebay.com/itm/RADIO-SHACK-...item589b59149c

Greg


Thanks for the link and he extra effort to find the second link .

The first one sold last night for $10 plus 26S&H. The second one was
cheaper and I'm thinking about it. It will do the job, I'm sure.

And thanks William.
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,582
Default What size amp would I need?

On Thu, 31 Jan 2013 17:41:49 -0500, micky
wrote:

I asked before about a monaural amp for my bathroom TV, to use my
cetiling/wall speakers from a 30's record player.

I hadn't been able to find a small amp, under 50 dollars on ebay or
Amazon and that's why I asked here. Amazingly, then I found several
in some other list (I'll try tell you later when I find it again.)

......
Thanks again. I learned a lot from this thread.

Gregz, I think yours would have worked well, but it was too small to
sit under the tv, and took up too much needed space on top of the tv.
(I have a radio and I forgot to mention, most of the time I have a
wireless remote speaker from the compute( for Pandora; NPR podcasts,
AOL radio (which no longer has a 50's or do-wop genre) etc.)

The other list I refer to I found again it and was Google Shopping,
where I had used "small amplifier". The word small made a big
difference. But when I went back to ebay, "small " made no
difference, and with Amazon, it made things worse. It showed things
but none that I wanted, none that were in google shopping.

So finally I found a use for Google Shopping.

It had several suitable but I ended up getting
http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/28-6400
Provides 3.5W RMS output into a 4ohm load

If somewho it doesn't work, I'll get
http://www.mcmelectronics.com/produc...-M032-/28-6402
Provides 12W RMS output into a 4ohm load

Otherwise they are very similar. They both have line-in inputs.

(And I've bought from MCM i the past, before the web event. )

I had looked at my TV and it looked like it had stereo speakers, so I
dl'd the manual to be sure, and the 24" inch version does have stereo
but in the 13 inch version it's monaural, and it says 1Watt and 1
speaker. I should have done this in the first place, I guess, but I
didnt' think of it.

So 3.5 watts should be more than what's there now.

The manual was useful for other reasons. For example, the tv has a
setting where the speakers are off but the volume control controls the
sound coming out of the RCA jack(s) in the back.
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
It can be a challenge for many plus size women to find plus sizematernity clothing including maternity swimwear. In fact, many pregnant womenmost especially those who are plus size wouldn't want themselves caughtwearing swimsuits. But then again, how [email protected] Electronics Repair 0 April 21st 08 11:01 AM
Neoprene Washers: Trade Size vs Actual Size JW Home Repair 0 July 5th 05 12:28 PM
nano size laser weld spot size for stainless steel sheets Venky Metalworking 3 February 7th 05 04:25 PM
H-size & V-size on Philips Magnavox 9P5531 Projection Television SupraMan Electronics Repair 1 September 3rd 03 05:11 AM
H-Size & V-Size on Philips Magnavox 9P5531 Projection TV Donald Perkins Electronics Repair 1 September 3rd 03 12:17 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:03 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"