
Overall, the Pyle Pro was great, and I have no problem recommending Pyle Pro for anyone wanting one. LOVE THIS Pyle Pro
Is this a good deal 10 points?
http://www.amazon.com/Pyle-Pro-PGEKT50-Professional-Electric-Amplifier/dp/B002UL7XW0
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Are you sure you did not blow your speaker? Try a speaker that you know works on the amp to experiment. If the amp still is low volume, then you need to have it repaired or replace it.
5 feet of cable is not going to make a difference, one way or the other, use any speaker wire 16 gage would be good…or even 18 gage.
It really is no problem as long as you don’t push that amp into distortion. It should have “peak” or “limit” lights on each channel – you need to keep an eye on those when you are playing it loud.That amp is probably not 1000 watts per channel into 8 ohms anyway. It is probably putting out less than 300 watts per channel into 8 ohms.I have been DJ’ing and running pro sound systems for over 20 years and I have never blow a speaker because I am very careful not to push the amp into distortion.
It isn’t ‘bi-ampd’ but it will work fine.
your probably gonna need an upgraded altanator… u will need a nother battery or two.. and u will need to get a capacitor.. your gonna be pushing so much watts that u will kill ur battery in no time… but id probably go with 1000 wat power reference amp…put one to each and trust me u will make them pound..
That “tiny” 35 watt amp you describe was something we old folks recognize as a “Tube” or “Valve” amp.This is an example of electronics before transistors miniaturized everything.Don’t be fooled by the small watt rating, Tubes handle a LOT of power (touch the wrong lead when grounded and youre dead). Many people love the warm smooth sound tube amps give.It is easy to design an amp with tons of rated power, but it will sound like crap.A well designed and built amp with with modest power rating will play loud enough to get the cops to the door and sound good at the same time.I had a 90 watt amp that I drove a set of electrostatic speakers(notoriously power hungry) just fine.Amplifiers are on the surface, very simple devices, it’s easy to design and built them to extreme power levels, much harder to get them to sound good at any power level.It is easy to find high quality amps for sale on Ebay or Audiogon or other similar sites.That 3K amp is a Public Address Amplifier, not suitable for music or HT.
Yes, use the VCD format, your player supports this.PRODUCT INFO Detail Motorized Slide Down Control Panel 6.5” Wide TFT LCD Screen NTSC/ PAL Compatible Picture Control: Brightness/ Contrast/Hue/ Chroma Screen Angle/ Position Memory Repeat/ Program/ Random/ Intro Play AM/ FM Stereo Receiver 30 Preset Stations Auto Memory Store/ Preset Scan DVD/ VCD/ CD/ MP3 Compatible Parking Video Input 4 Ch RCA Preamp Output Rear Video Output Subwoofer Output Card Size Full Function Remote Control
Sorry to be the first one to tell you….PYLE is junk! Party guests will laugh at you with those…really junk. Go to a real audio store for some quality equipment if you want to impress your friends.
Pyle is not the same high-quality company it was when it was founded.Their recent and current products are barely, if any, better than the junk proffered without any name on it.I bought a Pyle PADH series speaker from MCM Electronics; it’s OK for the simple, low-power voice-only purpose I have for it,but for DJ work, it would suck.For what you are doing, I would suggest something from JBL (but be careful – some of their products are also made in China; be prepared to spend serious money to get USA-made, high-quality speakers from them).
What do you mean by ‘connect’? The proper way to use multiple amps is to split the input signal. There are several ways to do that and the one you use largely depends on how much of an audiophile you are. You’ll get the best sound by properly using a crossover. However, that requires a wider set of knowledge than using an equalizer. It’s possible that one of your amps has a built in crossover with a line level out that you could send to another amp, but it is more likely that you’ll need an external crossover.
Pyle amps & speakers are junk. Other brands of junk speakers & amps are Gemini, Gemsound, MTX, Behringer, Technical HiFi, GMI just to name a few… there are a lot of them. Also any company that has “Pro” in the brand name is junk.Quality Budget Sound System http://pleppy.blogspot.com/2007/03/quality-budget-sound-system.htmlPA Systems http://pleppy.blogspot.com/2007/04/pa-systems.htmlTwo obvious clues that a company name is a junk brand for speakers;1. Multiple piezo tweeters lined up horizontally. It looks nice, but it sounds terrible. http://www.123dj.com/speakers/gemini/gsm1580.gif2. Any speaker or subwoofer containing a 21″ woofer. 21″ is too large. Again it looks nice, but it sounds terrible.http://www.123dj.com/speakers/gmi/2180.htmlAny company that puts looks so far above sound quality that they would build a speaker with a 21″ woofer or multiple piezo tweeters lined up horizontally is a junk brand that should be avoided.The two most popular good quality / low budget PA speakers are Yamaha’s Club Series V speakers & JBL’s JRX speakers.Yamaha S115V Club Series V Speaker $329.99 eachhttp://www.guitarcenter.com/shop/product/buy_yamaha_s115v_club_series_v_speaker?full_sku=102470432JBL JRX115 Speaker $309.99http://www.guitarcenter.com/shop/product/buy_jbl_jrx115_15_2way_speaker_cabinet?full_sku=102566023The Peavey PV115 is even cheaper & still a good quality DJ speaker.Peavey PV115 speaker $219.99http://www.guitarcenter.com/shop/product/buy_peavey_pv115_2way_15_speaker_cabinet?full_sku=104005129If you don’t plan on using a sub woofer you’ll probably want a pair of speakers that use a 15″ woofer. But if you plan on using a subwoofer get a pair a speakers that use 10″ or 12″ woofer, because 15″ woofers don’t reproduce mid range frequencies very well.QSC, Crown & Peavey are popular brands for good quality PA amps.
Ok you say your system has a subwoofer line out but you do not have a subwoofer connected to it. Also that you do not have much bass sound. To me it sounds like your system is set up to output bass frequencies to the subwoofer output. You need to read the manual to see how you can configure your system so that it knows that it does not have a subwoofer and that the bass signals should go to the regular speakers. Once you do that you should have the bass that you are now missing.Most systems that have subwoofer outputs have the ability to specify what type of speakers are hooked up to the regular outputs. Your selection should be “large” – or something similar to that.
First off, ignore any and all peak or max values.Second, a 4-channel isn’t an ideal amp for subs. Typically a 2-channel or mono amp is what’s used.With that, match the RMS watts between amp and subs at the right impedance (ohm ) loads.Yes, having two different subs isn’t a good idea as sound cancellations can occur. Two different amps makes no difference as most people use a 4-channel amp for the speakers and a mono amp for the subs.See my site for more info http://spkrbox1.spaces.live.com
Well probably there’s too much distortion within the amp. Try putting down the treble,and mids. That should help
Current amp: attach your speaker wires to the amp and then to the sub as follows. there are 4 connections on the sub. +/- per voice coil. Attach the + from the amp to the + on one voice coil, and the – to the – on the other voice coil. then attach a jumper wire from the unused – on the first coil and the + on the other. This will arrange the coils in series (same concept used for multiple subs). Arranging the coils in series will raise the resistance and allow a lower and more efficient current flow from the amp. It allows you to push the sub harder without a high wattage amp. You will get better results. After you get the pyle, you could go back to parallel. + and – to each coil without the jumper, or leave it like it is. Just be careful that the sub isn’t being overpowered if you leave it.