I have an a/d/s P-850 amplifier as my "primary" amp in the ShoWagon. (There is also a PPI PCX-280 whose job it is to run the subwoofers.)
When the weather is colder than -10 degrees F, and the car has been sitting out for any length of time, the P-850 will not run. It takes anywhere from two to 10 minutes (the colder it is the longer it takes) for it to start working, and when it does start, it fades in slowly over a 20--45 second period of time. Even in the summertime with temperatures in the 80's, that amp will take 8--10 seconds to get going. I always figured that since it was a pretty big, pretty complex amp (8 channels with separate gain controls and active crossovers on each channel pair), it just needed a bit of extra time.
The PCX-280 amp starts up immediately, regardless of temperature. But listening to Mozart through nothing but a pair of 10" subs just lacks that "concert hall" experience.
My question is: why would a solid state amplifier with no moving parts be so drastically affected by a cold environment? I always thought that with transistors and diodes and other magical stuff the colder the better.
tanstaafl.