WowFlutter wrote:I was also thinking of attenuating the ADI-2 Pro input to match its auto level in a sweet spot that works best for me and my setup.
As I don't need the buffers, could I realise this with an H-pad?
My reasoning:
Power amp module has a fixed 12.8 dB gain.
I would like to match the +13 dBu @0dBFS ADI-2 Pro level with 1W into my 8 ohm speakers, which requires driving them with 2.83V or 11.25 dBu.
In order to do so, I need to attenuate the ADI-2 Pro XLR balanced line output by 13 + 12.8 - 11.25 = 14.55 dB.
Should I calculate the resistances in the -14.55 dB H-pad to match the ADI-2 Pro's output impedance (200 ohm), or the power amp module's input impedance (4.4 kohm)?
Neither.
1. The amp has a nominal 425 W into 4 Ohm power output.
This equals 41.2 V or 34.5 dBu
Gain is 12.8 dB from the amps balanced input.
34.5 dBu - 12.8 dB (gain) = 21.7 dBu for full drive.
The amps spec’s even say 11.2 V input for full drive, this would be 23.2 dBu.
This almost perfectly fits to ADI-2‘s 24 / 27.5 dBu full scale balanced output, including a little headroom.
ADI-2 Pro’s “Auto Ref Level” could care for the attenuation at lower listening levels.
A passive attenuation of more than 4 dB would limit the max. power output possible.
2. If, for whatever reason, you really want to go for ADI-2 out 13 dBu = 1 W into 8 Ohm, a 3 resistor balanced voltage divider (no H-pad) would be the way to go.
The dividers output resistance / shunting resistor should be quite low to terminate the amp’s input for lowest noise.
• A 330 Ohm shunt resistor, R3 about preserves the value ADI-2 Pro offers.
• The 2 series resistors R1, R2 can be 560 Ohm each, which do not over-stress ADI-2 Pro’s output chips.
The resulting damping, including:
• ADI-2 Pro’s 200 Ohm output resistance,
• 4 Ohm for the cable,
• 4,400 Ohm amps input resistance is:
-14.51 dB, a close match to the 14.55 dB needed.
This voltage divider’s output resistance is 265 Ohm, low enough to avoid amp noise.