What is a power amp?

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killthepixelnow

killthepixelnow

Do it right or dont do it
Really, I searched the web hoping to find some information but it was useless. So, can anybody explain me:
1. What is a power amp?
2. What's the basic uses of a power amp?
Thanks a lot. I'll apreciate your help.
 
I'm CERTAINLY not an expert, but I'll do my best trying to explain it.

Theres two types of montors[ speakers]. Active and Passive. Actives are able to power themselves once you hook 'em up. Passive monitors, however, are not able to power themselves. Thats when you buy a power amp to distribute power to the Passive Monitors.
 
it's just what it sounds like....a power amplifier. Power is also known as wattage (watts)...so a power amplifier=watt amplifier.
they can be used for anything, but we usually refer to power amps when talking about amplifiers for speakers. Speakers need an amplifier of some sort in order for them to work. Active speakers have amplifiers built inside them...and passive speakers require you to purchase the power amp separately.
 
A power amp is just that, an amp and nothing else. A power amp can be used to power just about any passive speaker. So generally what happens are two scenarios either

Live Sound (like at a bar or stadium or arena or....):

All the mics feed back to a mixer. The mixer feeds output to a power amp. The power amp feeds the speakers. No power amp and the speakers make no sound.

Studio Sound

We record something to tape/hard disk and now we want to listen to it. If your speaker do not have their own power (like the Mackie HR824s, Event 20/20bas, etc) then you need an amp to run your passive speakers. So you output form the tape deck/ sound card. Then that goes to the power amp. The power amp then goes to the speakers.


What might make more sense to you is to think about a guitar amp. A guitar amp is really 3 pieces in the same box.... a preamp, a power amp, and a speaker. The preamp gives you gain (a lot gain gives you distortion). The power amp gives you volume. The speaker converts from electricity to air movement.

Make more sense? This is very simplified and you will have setups with a lot more components to it, but hopefully this give you the idea.

The next question is, why in the world woul dyou ver want a power amp and not an all in one unit? Flexibility. It is the same reason you would want to but separate cymbals for drums, or pickups for a guitar... maybe you need 1 million watts of power or 100. A separate power amp lets you build a system to your needs.
 
The picture you have posted is just the power amp section from a marshall tube amp. There is also a preamp that marshall makes to go along with it.

Normally, when you talk about power amps, you are talking about PA amplifiers or the amplifiers used to power your monitors.
 
I'm starting to understand. It makes sense to get it if you want more flexibility... but it cost a lot more, lol. If I'm guessing right a head amp (i.e. Peavey 5150) is a preamp + power amp. The speaker would be the cabinet, right?
 
killthepixel said:
I'm starting to understand. It makes sense to get it if you want more flexibility... but it cost a lot more, lol. If I'm guessing right a head amp (i.e. Peavey 5150) is a preamp + power amp. The speaker would be the cabinet, right?
Yes. Heads tend to sound different than component systems because a head is running off the same power supply.
 
Understand there are a lot of competing factors involved when designing a power amp. The needs for a guitar are going to be very different than in a PA or home stereo. For a guitar amp many times you WANT distortion in the power amp so different things are done to create that. For a PA, you usually want it to be clean and to sound like what is going into it therefore those power amps are made differently. So not all power amps are created the same though they perform the same function.

If I'm guessing right a head amp (i.e. Peavey 5150) is a preamp + power amp. The speaker would be the cabinet, right?

Yup.
 
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