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JL Audio 500/1 |
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JL Audios sub amp offers an adaptive and tightly regulated output. |
JL Audio 500/1 Specs
Price & Contact: Call for pricing; Tel: 954-443-1100, Web:www.jlaudio.com |
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| by Brian Smith | ||||
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The 500/1 is a single-channel, class D subwoofer amplifier with a power rating of 500 watts into any load between 1.5 ohms and 4 ohms. Features include the Regulated Intelligent Power Supply, which is responsible for the single power rating, differential inputs, buffered preamp outs, internal crossovers with variable cutoff frequencies and selectable slopes, a parametric bass boost circuit with wired remote, and a variable infrasonic filter. Performance The sidebar with the specs pretty much speaks for itself. The 500/1s adaptive and tightly regulated output appears to work quite well, providing about 600 watts into resistive loads under a wide range of test conditions. The amp also seems more than happy driving reactive loads and posted an impressive 733 watts into 2 ohms. The only performance shortcoming appears to be efficiency. At 1/3 of its maximum output, the 500/1 measured 57 percent efficient, which is somewhat lower than the rest of the class D units that weve seen to date. In addition, the efficiency remains in the mid 50s all the way to full output rather than increasing to the 80-percent-plus that weve seen in other units. The result is an amp with efficiency thats about 30 percent better than a class A/B unit at 1/3 output and roughly equal at full output. Efficiency is the main advantage to class D amplification, but this amp is likely small enough to get away with compromising a bit. Connections & Adjustments Installation The preamp section of the 500/1 is also quite impressive. Much like the 300/4 that we reviewed a few issues back, its flexibility and degree of control are head and shoulders above anything else that Ive seen in an automotive amplifier. Among my favorite features are the detented frequency controls found on the crossovers, bass boost, and infrasonic filter. Rather than continuously variable pots, these controls utilize stepped adjustments and the owners manual lists the exact frequency at each click. The parametric bass boost is another very cool gadget. The center frequency adjustment covers a wide and sensible range of 20 Hz to 80 Hz, the bandwidth adjustment (Q) ranges from very narrow to ridiculously wide and the circuit can be completely bypassed if you so desire. Equally impressive (in a test-bench-geek kinda way), is that the circuit doesnt effect the amps response at all if the boost knob is dialed to 0 dB. All of the amps filters are similarly well behaved. The infrasonic filter covers a far wider range than typical, so wide in fact, that it overlaps the lower half of the crossovers range. Its possible to nearly eliminate all output from the amp by misusing these controls. Hows that for flexibility? On top of all that, you get a pair of buffered RCA outputs with an independent crossover with the same cool controls, a heat sink thats more than just a heat storage device, and an amp that wont quit no matter how heartlessly you drive it. The amps protection circuits cause it to reduce output rather than shut down completely. What else could you ask? Well...Id really dig a cut/boost control on the parametric, but beyond that, Im really drawing a blank. |
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