With the acquisition of the brand by AAMP of America, there are solid plans in place to restore the brand to its previous high end status and stature. To accomplish this, a dedicated team of highly experienced people are focused on the Phoenix Gold car audio line, and one of the results of that focus is sitting here in front of me right now. On my bench is an all new, flagship power amplifier known simply as “The One”. The Class D monoblock monster amp I received is still in final development, but if this fully functioning prototype is any indication, people are going to be talking about Phoenix Gold a lot!
Measuring 36” long, 11” wide, and 3” tall, and weighing in at almost 50 pounds, the amp reminds me of some of the other limited edition trunk busting Phoenix Gold amps of 20 years ago. Except that there was never one with this kind of jaw dropping power! Final power ratings are still being worked out, but I can tell you that this is easily one of the most powerful amplifiers I have measured in a long time.
FEATURES:
“The One” is designed to be a high-end, limited edition, competition oriented amplifier, and also the most powerful Phoenix Gold amplifier ever built. And, it achieves all of those goals! If you compete in the SPL wars, this amp was designed with you in mind. Using a power supply designed to operate at higher than normal supply voltages, (16 volts) “The One” is built with one purpose in mind, delivering mind-numbing amounts of power to a bunch of soon to be very warm voice coils!
The chassis of the amplifier is extruded aluminum, and the prototype I received was finished in a nice black anodized brushed aluminum. I can’t speak to other cosmetics, because my sample was too early in development to have any badging or logos. My sample also did not include final packaging or a manual, so I can’t comment on those either.
One end of the amplifier is completely dedicated to the care and feeding of the massive power supply section. There are no less than six 1/0 terminals, three for positive and three for ground. And believe me, you need them all to handle the current demands of this beast. A remote-on lead is the only other connection on this end of the amp.
The opposite end of the amplifier is for signal input and control. There you’ll find the usual selection of controls and adjustments, with gain, variable bass boost, a variable frequency -24dB subsonic filter, adjustable low pass crossover (also with -24dB slopes) and a variable phase control. On the underside of the amplifier, a 60mm box fan is used to flow air over the output sections’ filtering. And like you’d need it, there is also a Master/Slave switch to allow the connection of two of these monsters together! You have the usual RCA inputs and a pair of paralleled outputs, and an additional set of RCA outputs specifically for the slave amplifier. Dual speaker connections are also found on this end of the amp, and will accept 10 gauge wire. LED’s for power and protection, and a remote level control connection round out the features on the control end of the amp.
TECHNICAL:
I took the bottom cover off “The One”, and even though the amp I was looking at was a prototype, it looked finished inside, without any of the usual kluges and jumpers often part of the prototype process. There are two main PCB’s basically divided into the power supply and output sections, and the boards use thick 3 ounce copper for the traces. Daughter boards use surface mounted parts, while the main PCB’s carry low tolerance through-hole components. The power supply uses a total of thirty-six IRF 1405 power MOSFETs, each capable of switching over 70 amps of current. Output devices are excellent Fairchild FDA24N40F’s, and there are no less than thirty-two of them! No wonder this amp is 3 feet long!
The power supply toroids (plural, because there are 6 of them!) draw energy from seventeen 3300µF 20V capacitors, and supply the output sections’ twenty-four 18800µF 200V caps to create a secondary energy reserve of 43,200uF. The layout seems fairly well sorted, although the heavy-duty 8 gauge cables that provide the output signal are routed directly over the output devices. Normally, this will degrade the signal to noise performance, but with this much power on tap, that’s not going to be a problem. The fan cooling could be a bit better sorted, and it probably will be in production models. My sample has to try to suck air in the underside of the amp, with only about 1/8” of clearance to the floor, and if it’s mounted on carpet, it’s not going to draw much air. I suppose mounting the amp on ½” spacers would be an easy fix however.
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