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Yeah I'd say this is an uncommon problem.
Would be great to have some measurements. Can you produce a sine wave (tone) on your motherboard audio? 50 or 60 Hz would be most compatible with all conceivable digital multimeters and 1 kHz would be a standard for audio measurements. For a sine wave, V = V RMS. I use the software Audiotester for this but maybe you can get a hold of a sine wave mp3 or make one with Audacity or something like that. Be careful with test tones on your speakers, you could toast tweeters easily and mid-woofers too, to a lesser extent.
I would expect out of a on-board audio 1V to 2V RMS.
Maybe your outputs are set to headphone mode and produce a higher level?
Hmm, I should go and measure mine. Edit: Did that. Gigabyte GA-MA78GM-UD2H motherboard, ALC 889 Audio. Played a 50 Hz Tone grabbed from a Test CD with iTunes.
When plugged in as Headphones: 1.5 V RMS.
When plugged in as Loudspeaker Output: 1.45 V RMS.
So on my audio, headphone operation is only ever slightly louder.
And the other thing that would be good, can you measure the current draw of your amps when the music is insanely loud? You'd need a DC capable clamp-on ammeter, the very cheap ones do AC only. My semi-modest audio system draws about 20 Amps on full volume, with regular music. Your setup would be able to draw much more and be much louder also.
There is no "no gain" setting on any amp. How many Volts is stated for minimum gain in your amps' manual or the amp itself?
Last edited by JuniorGeezer; 11-09-2009 at 05:21 PM.
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