Nad 7140 Brochure

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Nad 7140 Brochure

Extracted text from Nad 7140 Brochure (Ocr-read)


Page 1

High-current output stage Electrical power is the product of voltage and current, but current flowing through the voice coil is what makes a loudspeaker cone vibrate and reproduce sound. In many amplifiers the out-put current is deliberately constricted by current limiters (protection circuits), in order to allow the use of smaller, cheaper output transistors. But NAD engineers have always known, and other manufacturers have lately begun to realise, that to provide precise electromagnetic control of the speakers motion the amplifier must be able to supply high peak currents upon demand. The NAD 7140 can produce peak currents in excess of 30 amperes per channel. Loudspeaker impedance matching Standard lab tests of amplifiers use 8-ohm resistors in place of loud-speakers, but most loudspeakers have a lower and more complex impedance that increases the required amplifier output current. (And if you connect two pairs of loud-speakers, the effective impedance of the pair is halved.) For this reason the 7140, like all NAD amplifiers and receivers, is designed to deliver its maximum power into low impedances of 4 or even 2 ohms. But the exclusive NAD impedance selector allows you to re-optimise the 7140s amplifier circuit to deliver greater output voltage for maximum effective power delivery to loudspeakers whose true impedance is 8 ohms or higher. Soft Clipping-„¢ NADs trademarked Soft Clipping circuit gently limits the waveform when the amplifier is driven beyond its maximum power rating. By preventing the output transistors from being driven fully into saturation, the Soft Clipping reduces the harshness that is normally heard when an amplifier is overdriven. Because of this and the amplifiers high dynamic headroom, the sound of the 7140 remains clean and musical at high sound levels, rather than being distorted as in other amplifiers. Bass EQ A special equalisation circuit provides 6 dB of boost at 32 Hz in order to strengthen and extend the deep-bass response of closed-box loudspeaker systems. A typical bookshelf speaker that rolls off below 50 Hz will have strong output to 30 Hz when used with the NAD 7140, providing the sort of authentic bass feel that might otherwise require a costly separate subwoofer system. Infrasonic filter Precise infrasonic filtering is included to eliminate signal contamination from turntable rumble, record warps, tonearm/stylus resonances, vibration and acoustic feedback. This guarantees the cleanest possible handling of signals within the audible range and eliminates the excessive woofer-cone excursions that can cause inter modulation distortion and muddy bass in systems with-out filtering. Design for real-world conditions Tuner specifications are measured with a medium-strong signal (65 dBf, i.e., 1000 ĀµV into 300 ohms), but in the real world a tuner must perform well with signals of widely varying strength and quality. For example, an FM tuners resistance to multipath interference depends on its ability to capture the de- sired signal and reject weaker reflected signals; the lower the tuners capture ratio, the more efficiently it rejects the interference and captures clean stereo. The capture ratio of the NAD 7140 is consistently excellent, not only at the medium signal strengths where other tuners perform well, but also over the 100-to-1 range in signal level from 25 to 65 dBf, allowing many more stereo broadcasts to be received without distortion. Optimum gains and losses In the I.F. section of any tuner the signal is both attenuated (by the high-selectivity filters) and re- amplified, by high-gain ICs. But the final signal-to-noise ratio can never be better than at the point where the signal IS weakest. By optimising the filter design to reduce losses, NADs designers were able to eliminate an entire stage, reducing l.F gain, and still deliver the optimum signal level to the PLL MPX decoder-obtaining an 80 dB stereo S/N ratio at 75 dBf.

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PRE-AMP SECTION Phono input Input impedance (R and C)47kW / 100pF Input sensitivity,(1kHz, ref. rated power)3.2mV Signal/Noise ratio (A-weighted with cartridge connected)76dB ref. 5mV THD (20Hz - 20kHz)<0.04% RIAA response accuracy (20Hz - 20kHz)Ā±0.5dB Line level inputs Input impedance (R and C)15kW / 100pF Input sensitivity (ref. rated power)160mV Maximum input signal>10V Signal/Noise ratio (A-weighted ref 1W)88dB Frequency response (20Hz - 20kHz)Ā±0.5dB Infrasonic filter-3db at 15Hz, 24dB/octave THD0.01% Line level outputs Output impedancePre-amp600W TapeSource Z + 1kW Phones220W Maximum output level12V Tape8V Phones>10V into 600W >500mV into 8W Tone controls TrebleĀ±7dB at 10kHz BassĀ±10dB at 50Hz Bass EQ+3dB at 70Hz +6dB at 40Hz POWER AMP SECTION Continuous output power into 8W *40W (16dBW) Rated distortion (THD 20Hz - 20kHz)0.03% Clipping power (maximum continuous power per channel)50W IHF Dynamic headroom at 8W+6dB IHF dynamic power (maximum short term power per channel)8W160W (22dBW) 4W200W (23dBW) 2W250W (24dBW) Damping factor (ref. 8W, 50Hz)>50 Input impedance22kW / 880pF Input sensitivity (for rated power into 8W)1V Frequency response6Hz - 50kHz +0, -3dB Signal/noise ratioref. 1W100dB ref. rated power116dB THD (20Hz - 20kHz)<0.03% Ā© NAD Electronics. All rights reserved. E & OE