NAD 7240PE Stereo Receiver User Manual


 
7240PE
Stereo Receiver
Date of manufacture : ? - Nov 89
Please note that this document contains the text from the original product brochure, and some technical statements may now be out of date
The 7240PE receiver consists of the 3240PE integrated amplifier, with its vast reserves of clean, solid
power for the the wide dynamic range of modern recordings, plus an exceptionally sensitive digital
tuner.
Power Envelope design
While the 7240PE is rated at 40 watts/channel of steady-state power, its +6 dB of IHF dynamic
headroom means that its dynamic power for musical transients exceeds 160 watts/channel at 8 ohms
and 200 watts/channel at 4 or 2 ohms. Even with long 200-millisecond tone-bursts, representing the full
duration of musical notes and chords, the 7240PE produces an impressive 100 watts per channel.
High-current output stage
The 7240PE de-livers up to 25 amperes per channel to ensure precise electromagnetic control of the
speaker’s voice-coil, even with impedances as low as 2 ohms.
Impedance selector
This rear-panel switch lets you optimise the amplifier’? operation to drive either low impedances (2 to 6
ohms) or a single set of speakers with a true 8-ohm (or higher) impedance.
Soft Clipping™
When the amplifier is driven beyond its rated power, NAD’s famous Soft Clip-ping™ M circuit gently
limits the waveform and prevents the harshness that occurs in other receivers when the output
transistors arc driven into saturation.
Low-noise phono preamplifier
NAD’s phono pre-amp circuits feature accurate RIAA equalisation, correct interfacing with the complex
impedance of the phono cartridge, very low noise and plenty of headroom to accommodate the
highest-level peaks without distortion.
Digital-ready inputs
With overload-proof line inputs and low-noise circuits for volume and tone control, the 724OPE
accommodates a dynamic range greater than 100 dB, preserving the transparent clarity of the finest
analogue and digital recordings.
Bass EQ with infrasonic filtering
The equalisation circuit boosts the deepest bass by 6 d B providing the sort of authentic bass “feel” that
might otherwise require a costly separate subwoofer system. At the same time, a sharp infrasonic filter
prevents excessive woofer-cone motion and minimises the bass-muddying effect of turntable rumble,
warps and tone arm/stylus resonances.
Musically Effective Tone Controls
Ordinary bass and treble control circuits intrude on the midrange; boosting the bass, for instance, makes
vocals thick and boomy. In NAD receivers, the bass and treble controls do what their names imply: they
vary the strength of the bass (the solid foundation, the musical beat) and the treble (the crisp detail the
airy brilliance) while preserving a neutral, accurate midrange response.