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Archive for January, 2010

5.1 Surround Wireless

January 8th, 2010 2 comments

Choosing Good 5.1 Surround Wireless

By. Weerad D. Arma

Almost everyone wants a home theater with 5.1 surround sound and bass. But, many people can not handle the hassle of selecting and preparing equipment. Thus, we see a lot of people are not able to maximize equipment which they obtained from an electronics store. Therefore, before we buy, there are some things to our attention.

5.1 Surround WirelessThe very first is whether we have a special room for this system? Then go for a more powerful system. A bedroom or an average-sized room needs 40-80 watts per channel; room with a ceiling height will require 80 watts or more.

Video source and a set of five or six speakers that are connected through a home theater receiver. Some music lovers audio plug into the phone’s components. All you may need is a receiver and speakers, if the video and audio components are available in our house. Click Here ! or … Read more…

Speaker Denon

January 8th, 2010 1 comment

Type Of Speaker Denon

By Richard Runion

Almost everyone wants a home theater with surround sound and bass. But, many people can not handle the hassle of selecting and preparing equipment. Thus, we see a lot of people are not able to maximize peralatran which they obtained from an electronics store. Therefore, before we buy, there are some things to our attention.

Speaker DenonThe very first is whether we have a special room for this system? Then go for a more powerful system. A bedroom or an average-sized room needs 40-80 watts per channel; room with a ceiling height will require 80 watts or more.

Video source and a set of five or six speakers that are connected through a home theater receiver. Some music lovers audio plug into the phone’s components. All you may need is a receiver and speakers, if the video and audio components are available in our house.

The second is the video component, they are (in order) component-video, S-Video, composite video, and antenna / cable input, component video, and digital optical, coaxial, and RCA connectors for audio components, is a connector that will provide the highest quality signal. Click Here ! or … Read more…

Speaker Audiophile

January 8th, 2010 1 comment

Speaker Audiophile Explained

By Dan Mason

AWG stands for American Wire Gauge, a standard system of measurement of cross-sectional area of a wire. This is used to determine how much current the wire can handle. AWG caused much confusion for consumers, as standards can be a bit difficult to understand. It is more than 12 AWG 14 AWG or vice versa? Why one cable was thicker than the others even though they had identical AWG? AWG is a good indicator of quality? Are AWG problem, and if so, how?

Speaker AudiophileThese are all good questions, and we’ll get there soon. First, let’s briefly touch on how to actually AWG calculated.

AWG how is it calculated ?

If the cable is a solid circular wire, the AWG is easy to calculate. Take the area (pi x radius squared) to obtain cross-sectional area, and look up the AWG diagram (example below) to work outside the AWG. If the cable has a few strands, similar operations conducted to work out the cross-sectional area of each strand, which then simply multiplied by the number of strings to get a total AWG. But be careful when comparing this figure as an AWG is not linear. For each additional 3 AWG, it is half of the cross-sectional area. So 9 AWG is about half of the 6 AWG, the other half of the 3 AWG. So is the quadruple thickness of 3 AWG AWG 9. Click Here ! or … Read more…