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Hifiberry amp2 16

Full Version: Touchscreen issue using Hifiberry Amp2. You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting. Hello, Image: bluewavestudio-openauto-pro-release I flashed a micro sd with crankshaft-ng, attached the Amp2 and everything is working fine. I switched back to Openauto Pro and replaced the config.

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WATCH RELATED VIDEO: HifiBerry DAC2 HD sound card for Raspberry Pi

Small speakers for music/audio indoors


Small-ish cube speakers that won't break the bank would be ideal. There about a billion on Amazon, and Bose is going to be too expensive for me. I've heard some compliments on the various Edifier models. They have the P17 model for passive speakers if you already have an amplifier. The JBL s are the darling for home bookshelf speakers, I think. Cube speakers are either full range, which means there's no tweeter at all, or have a tweeter mounted in the middle of a woofer. A coaxial tweeter can be done quite well, with a lot of money and engineering, but people are divided as to whether it's really worth bothering with for a budget cube.

The Micca Covo-S is a coaxial one that some people were quite happy with but other people totally hated so unless you try it out personally, I'm not sure it's worth it over Pyle cubes. Are you planning on having everything wall mounted? Or on top of furniture with the wires hidden behind? Refurb TV Soundbars are actually a fairly decent choice at this price point since they're basically two cubes wired together for you with an amp built in -- and since you don't need the latest video features, you can often pick up a higher end model that doesn't do 4K that's languishing in a stock room with a big discount.

Still, if you have room for something bigger than cubes, you can do pretty well for your money. Would like things to be mounted on the wall up at the corners, although I'm not necessarily opposed to it sitting on top of my dresser. So giving up the idea of a cube, going to concentrate on the smaller side. Really would prefer it to be not something that sticks out like a sore thumb on the wall though.

Do you already have the Amp hats and matching PSUs? How small is small enough? Are the Miccas that Paladin linked small enough? Like one audio out to my patio, with my kitchen and living room area on a different audio. Or the same in all the places.

That sort of thing. Although they aren't too terrible in size. Granted the Pi power eats into that 60W, but realistically I'm never going to have it turned up loud enough to matter, I don't think. Honestly, you're asking for some conflicting features here: Passive, small, cheap and good. I'm assuming you want good sound though If only half-decent sound is acceptable, I would just get a decent bluetooth portable speaker and use that.

Depending on the place you want to install this setup and the other details of the location I would look at the various 'soundbar' type devices on the market. There are many with a variety of input options including analog, usb, optical, HDMI, and bluetooth. Some have the option for a wireless subwoofer as well. I would look at those. You could mount the soundbar behind a table or couch or just put it on a table behind some items that keep it out of sight a bit.

Covers all the required inputs without issues and it sounds surprisingly good as long as you don't need it to pound your ears. If it had a subwoofer, I could use the Yamaha app to change its crossover setting and it would get even louder. They claim to reach as low as hz but I would bet that is on a test tone only and with some distortion and at relatively reduced output. Basically they will have reasonable mids and little to no bass. Maybe keep an eye out for some 5.

They're small, reasonable quality, and can be easily mounted if you'd like. The 5. I rescued a set from my dad's house and hooked up 2 of them as rears in a 4.

Paladin wrote: Honestly, you're asking for some conflicting features here: Passive, small, cheap and good. The Klipsch is just way too much per speaker, probably even if that price was for a pair. I think I'll just have to up my budget a bit to the range, unfortunately, and buy all the sets over a period of time, rather than lumping them together. Unless I find a great deal of course. I'm intending to run stereo for music, but each speaker of course is going to be one channel or another.

So I guess that means mono to each speaker. The problem with doing something like that with the Bose is that they'll be intended to pair with the sub, and without it they won't have good range. Something like the Polk, while not necessarily great, does manage to be decent without the sub.

But the door opens to a lot more options if I up the budget as it seems I'll have to. Ah well, it's only money, right? Drizzt wrote: I'm intending to run stereo for music, but each speaker of course is going to be one channel or another.

And yeah, the ask of "small, cheap, quality" is one of those classic "pick two" scenarios. Hm, how do you mean? But for the rest of the rooms you're right. Drizzt wrote: ant1pathy wrote: Drizzt wrote: I'm intending to run stereo for music, but each speaker of course is going to be one channel or another. Mix to mono from the software side prior to output. It'll sound more consistent across the house, especially when you have something cloned across all the speakers.

I was just going, price-wise, by what HiFiBerry had on their website. I still think you should consider powered speakers in addition to passive ones. There may also be a tiny further savings in that you can probably get just a Pi 4 case for less than one that fits the Pi 4 and Amp hat, unless you're planning on going naked.

The 'problem' with powered speakers, in my mind, is controlling the volume. I can just set it to a specific amount and use the stereo out and probably that'd work out OK, but if the speakers are on the wall that means 2 wires to one of them, and then a 3rd wire from one to the other.

Instead of just 1 wire to each. Possible, something I should think on, but I think I'd like to keep it simpler to run to the speakers. Which, potentially, I could just get a small cheap amp that sits by the RPi, but not as ideal in my mind. Paladin mention Edifier, but Swans is another company that makes powered speakers.

Their lineup tends to have similar offerings as Edifier. Drizzt wrote: The 'problem' with powered speakers, in my mind, is controlling the volume. You control volume the same way for both: via software control of the hardware volume control circuit built into the DAC. The Amp2 hat does not appear to have a volume control in the amp stage it lacks a physical volume knob, and it basically is controlled the same way as the DACs that HiFiBerry makes.

The powered speakers just have a second volume control as well, that you can use to easily set a hard upper limit for volume. The little IKEA speakers sound great for the price and include wifi. The Sonos ecosystem is great. Although my thought is 2 speakers per room, not 1, but still. Beyond that, I'm eventually not wanting the audio streaming from my phone, but direct from the service or files on my NAS. And in particular, I want the audio more or less doesn't need to be exact synced if I want a particular stream routed to multiple rooms at once.

Not the same station, but might be at different points in the station so different songs, in each room. That kind of thing. I'm think I probably will need PulseAudio setup for that. Might be pulseaudio local on the server, and then change the routing to route to different airplay endpoints which are connected to the different devices. This is making me think, thank you. Still more thinking to do though, for sure.

Plex works with Sonos now, although I don't know the exact details, but Plex is a direct link between the server and device even when using your phone as a controller. I've flirted with perhaps using Plex, but I'm still unsure if I want to. Need to figure out how to get the Amazon Prime Video plugin to work tho. But I take your point, another possible quality solution. But can it take the same audio and output it to multiple speakers at once? Or have separate audio streams going to separate speakers?

Even from the same service? Say 2 different Pandora stations, or 2 different SoundCloud tracks. Yes, Sonos does all the multi-room audio stuff.

In fact they're famous for it, back in the day that was their premiere feature. Now everybody does it. Sonos supports multiple accounts from the same streaming provider too. If you buy two of the same Sonos speaker, even the super-cheap IKEA variants, they can be setup in a stereo pair and everything happens wirelessly. It sets up its own wifi network for interconnections so it doesn't compete with your home wifi. Now it isn't. Only if you connect one of your Sonos speakers with ethernet or get a Sonos Boost.

I can't find any useful info on US pricing or availability though. Right, one speaker in your house needs to be on ethernet, then all the others will use a separate wifi network they brand SonosNET.


HIFIBERRY AMP2 for RASPBERRY PI A+/B+/2/3/ZERO

Corporate Solutions: Overview Customers Company. Home Download Purchase Support Company. Please login or register. Pages: [ 1 ] Go Down. You need a good power supply to get good results out of them, but I've been running two of these on top of raspberry pis to power various sets of speakers around my house. It's tiny and sounds pretty good.

Buy - Hifiberry - AMP2, AUDIO AMPLIFIER FOR RASPBERRY PI. Farnell offers fast quotes, same day dispatch, fast delivery, wide inventory.

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hifiberry amp2 16

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community. Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account. Sound distortion occurs after a while couple hours during LMS playback or a long pause.

The newest Raspberry Pi was kinda hard to get till I happened across it. Some online shops were taking orders of the Pi but then not indicating delivery dates.

[Solved] Is HiFiBerry Amp2 better than Topping MX3 as a DAC and an amp?


I initially connected it using a The board says 18V at the input terminals. It plays correctly. Do I have a defective AMP2 module? HiFiBerry says it's supposed to power the pi and then some from the amplifier power input. Implying it should work with , oh,

HiFiBerry Amp2

You have been familiar with Raspberry Pi for some time now or you just bought your first board, one way or the other you are going to feel the need for a suitable power amplifier to connect to your board and use your speakers, whether it is a project you are working on, or just for fun. That is where the HiFiBerry Amp2 comes in and in this article, we are going to give you a quick overview of what it has to offer. It is easy to set up and once connected to your speakers it offers quality sound at a great price. This process is simple and easy to do straight out-the-box. As the Amp2 powers the Raspberry Pi you do not need to connect an external power supply to the Raspberry Pi itself. The Amp2 works with both 4 Ohm and 8 Ohm speakers however it is recommended not to use a power supply that exceeds 18V in order for you to get the best output and longer warranty. I recommend using Volumio, it is free and easy to setup.

HiFiBerry. Guaranteed product originality. Available 38 pieces. Ready for dispatch: Mon - Wed 58,99 €. 49,16 € VAT excl. VAT incl. Add to Cart.

Pseudo-Review: Pennies From Heaven Where Cents Make Great Audio

Mount it onto the Raspberry Pi and you have a stereo audio system. You only have to connect your loudspeakers. It provides up to 60W power.

Case for HiFiBerry Amp2 - steel - black

RELATED VIDEO: Mobile HiFi / High-End DIY Lautsprecher, Bluetooth WLAN Lautsprecher! Visaton B100 + HifiBerry AMP2

It has milled holes for access to the most important connectors. The rear panel can be mounted with a fan not included. Use the screws provided with the kit to mount the case. This allows for multiple disassemblies without risk of damaging the product components. It has milled holes to allow access to the connectors, while protecting the most important components of the Raspberry Pi 4B. A 25 x 25 mm fan can be mounted in the rear panel no fan included.

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US UK. Switching between stores will remove products from your current cart. Item :. Mount it onto the Raspberry Pi and you have a stereo audio system. You only have to connect your loudspeakers. It provides up to 60W power. You only need a single V power supply to power the Raspberry Pi and the Amp2.

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  1. Matei

    very good thinking