Electronic – Can super amplified line-level audio (e.g. 60Hz sine) signal be used as an AC power source

acamplifieraudiolow-powerpower supply

However inefficient (or bizarre) this may sound— can a line-level 60Hz sine (originating from a sound card, oscillator, etc) amplified by a heavy duty 1000W+ RMS monoblock be used as a substitute for a high voltage AC power source?

If the square root of (1000W * 4 ohms) gets us 63V, AND supposing we use a step up transformer on that signal to bring us into the 120V range, theoretically, would we end up with a usable 126V 7.9A (from amps = watts / volts) power source?

Best Answer

Yes.

For a class A-B amplifier it wouldn't be a very efficient as much power would be lost in the output transistors. You could also run into power-factor problems if driving an inductive load. The out-of-phase voltage and current could damage the output transistors at high power.