This is a revival of an old post wherein Gonk summarized his thoughts as follows:
I've thrown a few ideas out, but I did it without much real order. Let's review that list of questions from Wednesday and see if I've answered many of them...
[list=1]
1. A "distribution amp" (at least the ones I've seen) may still need to have the input signal split beforehand, but it probably depends on the amp. I have seen a Channel Vision amp (the A1260, 12x60W at 8 ohms) that offers both separate local inputs for each pair of amp channels and a separate global input, however, and an amp like that would let you hook the 990's zone 2 output to a single point and drive as many as six pairs of speakers from that one amp with no splitters. An amp like that could potentially serve all of your indoor and outdoor amplification needs in one chassis, although you'd still need to address volume control in each space.
2. I've touched on this a bit already, but I'll toss out one other possible idea: get a Model 7075, split the zone 2 output several ways, and let each outdoor speaker have its own channel on the 7075. No integral gain controls, but it's an amp that should very effectively give you optimal performance from any outdoor speaker (or indoor second zone speaker) you might have.
3. Typically, gain control on amps is not the same as a pre-amp volume control, so it probably isn't adding gain to the incoming signal - just turning down the gain when asked to.
4. I'm no expert on these, but the link above is where I'd start my research if I was hunting for something along these lines.
5. We've also covered this one already, I think.
6. Not really - you'll need a sub with speaker-level inputs and outputs on its amp, and there should be some crossover adjustment available so you can "dial in" the crossover you need. The adjustment is standard on powered subs, and the speaker-level are very common (although not used everywhere).
With respect to Gonk's thoughts about splitting the Zone 2 output several ways so that I could run an Outlaw 7075 or perhaps the 7125 or some other multichannel 75 watts plus amp, I have the following three questions: (i) where can I find a multichannel splitter (I am aware of Y splitters, but not multi-channel splitters);(ii) what kind of base and stereo management is availalble if using a multchannel splitter so that I can use the same multichannel amp to power the setup for simple stereo with up to 3 sets of speakers and a subwoofer (will the Outlaw ICBM work for such a multichannel stereo setup?); and (iii) where in the system would the base/stereo management go?
On a related note, the Channel Vision A1260 seems like a great choice especially because it has a 1 input/6 output option, but I am concerned that it only has 60 watts per channel and I am afraid 60 watts may be underpowered for a large outdoor area. Therefore, another multichannel amp with more power but with a similar 1 input and multiple outputs might work too. Anyone know any high powered amp that has such an option? Of course, I will still have the base management issue, but I believe the Outlaw ICBM will work fine in this type of configuation where there is need for only one set of stereo outputs (that feed the 1 input/multiple output amp) and one subwoofer output that would likely feed a dedicated subwoofer amp (possibly a plate amp) with even more power. Any additional thoughts would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance.