I think I got this right but all you Electrical engineers and electronic officianados - feel free to comment or correct me where I've got it wrong.
If Total Power Consumption (Watts) = Volts x Amperes, then Amperes = Watts/Volts. Peak maximum output for a 5 channel 300w Amplifier would be 1500 watts. Divide 1,500 by the North American standard outlet at 120 volts and you've already consumed 12.5 amps. On a standard 15 amp outlet, that doesn't leave much room for your other components such as a projection TV or a subwoofer which draws a lot of power, pre/pro, DVD/CD player, game console, maybe another amp in a 6.1 or 7.1 set-up, etc.
Oh and what about everything else non-HT related in your room or floor that's drawing on that circuit as well, such as all your lighting. Granted the 12.5 assumes the amplifier is drawing full power which is rarely if ever the case, but you get the idea that adding a dedicated 20 amp circuit or two is the way to go to get the maximum performance out of your home theatre system that you may have spent so much money on.
To figure this out for yourself, look at the total power consumption reading on the back of all your components and add them up and divide by the voltage of your outlet. Again, its rare that everything would be drawing maximum peak power at the same time, but its incredible how much better your overall sonic performance especially those peak LFE effects sound with a dedicated circuit(s).
If Total Power Consumption (Watts) = Volts x Amperes, then Amperes = Watts/Volts. Peak maximum output for a 5 channel 300w Amplifier would be 1500 watts. Divide 1,500 by the North American standard outlet at 120 volts and you've already consumed 12.5 amps. On a standard 15 amp outlet, that doesn't leave much room for your other components such as a projection TV or a subwoofer which draws a lot of power, pre/pro, DVD/CD player, game console, maybe another amp in a 6.1 or 7.1 set-up, etc.
Oh and what about everything else non-HT related in your room or floor that's drawing on that circuit as well, such as all your lighting. Granted the 12.5 assumes the amplifier is drawing full power which is rarely if ever the case, but you get the idea that adding a dedicated 20 amp circuit or two is the way to go to get the maximum performance out of your home theatre system that you may have spent so much money on.
To figure this out for yourself, look at the total power consumption reading on the back of all your components and add them up and divide by the voltage of your outlet. Again, its rare that everything would be drawing maximum peak power at the same time, but its incredible how much better your overall sonic performance especially those peak LFE effects sound with a dedicated circuit(s).

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