Five channel amp setup help - Parasound A51


I just picked up a gently used A51. I think my excitement about the unit overcame my best judgment, and so now I have some questions I wish I had answered beforehand. But any help you guys can provide would be helpful:

1) The unit is placed inside a wooden media center. (Pottery barn Logan medium to be precise). It has 3 inches of air space on either side, but only an inch and a half of air space above it. The back of the cabinet has a cubby hole for wires - so basically no outlet for air through the back at all. The front is open - no doors. Has anyone used an amp such as this in this type of setup? I'm afraid it will overheat very quickly. I can take off the wood paneling in the rear of the amp for better airflow, but I wonder if even that will be sufficient.
2) I am using Sonance 831s for the ceiling surrounds. My home builder installed 14 gage symphony audio wire that goes from the amp to a volume control buried in the wall, which is set to max, to the speakers in the ceiling - I am guessing a total length of 30 to 50 feet. Is this gage of wire OK given this amp can output 250 watts of power or up to 60 amps of current per channel? Or am I at risk of starting a fire? Also, given the amp is capable of outputting 250w and the Sonance are rated to a max of 100w, am I in danger of blowing out the speakers even if i attenuate the signal coming out of my av7005 marantz preamp?

As you guys can tell, I'm new to the home theater setup so your patience is appreciated. I had an A21 before for my stereo setup but that was placed on the floor with nothing around it (I was unmarried at the time) and so heat was never a problem.

Thanks in advance and looking forward to reading your advice.
aman4kr4
I think you may have a problem with ventilation on your amp.
Maybe a big problem. I'm not familiar with that particular
amp but have owned other Parasound amps and they tend to run
hot. I suggest you set it on a table and power it on for 30
minutes or so. no need to connect anything, just let it idle.
If it's warm to the touch after 30 minutes, it will not be
good to only have 1" above it. You'll need to find
another location, or at least try running a fan over the top.

As for the speaker wires - no problem there, but I would
remove the volume controls. They can't be good for anything
in this arrangement.
You could try getting a couple of computer fans and then cutting out some holes in the rear panel to allow them to exhaust the heat. This is a fairly inexpensive solution, should cost you about $25 total...

-RW-
Got it. Thanks for the quick feedback guys.

I'm not a fan of the volume controls either. Will look into removing.
I think fans may be a good option to try.
You may alsi consider taking the top cover off the amp to provide more space for the heat to dissapate. That may help some and also you don't mention what is beneath that particular shelf. Is there a way to cut a hole in the shelf to allow the convection of the heat from the amp to draw in cooler air from below? I had a heating issue with one of my amps and the holes in the shelf below solved the issue by at least 10-12 degrees according to my laser thermometer.