The Sonos Amp has a single set of output posts. If you wanted to play on one or the other, but not both, you’d need a physical switch in between, and you would not be able to play two different things on the two ‘zones’.
That ‘switch’ would be the only way to adjust an independent volume for each room. The Sonos software will see the Sonos Amp as a single source, not two.
Bruce, appreciate the advice.
If I use a physical switch between the two sets would that also throw off the Trueplay tuning? I’m thinking I’d use Trueplay to tune each set of speakers independently from the other as each pair will reside in different rooms on opposite ends of the house.
I suspect you could tune to one set of speakers or the other, but not both. But Trueplay does not always make a big difference (or any perceptible difference) and if you have the speakers well positioned I would not let this put you off the proposed setup.
If you Google "impedance managed speaker switch with volume control" you should find some suitable devices.
John, thanks for that. I needed to hear that before I went throwing money away at another amp :)
Hey guys, I just realized that I have an old record player I’d like to plug into these speakers as well. So there would be two different inputs for these speakers - 1) record player and 2) tv. So in addition to the amp do I need to pick up a “multi input impedance managed switch with volume control”? If so, any recommendations?
The Amp actually has two inputs, one is digital, for HDMI ARC from your TV set, the other is analog, a pair of RCA jacks that work off of a line level (not phono level) input.
You can choose in the software which input you use.
The real questions are 1) does your TV have an ARC output and 2) does your turntable have a built in pre-amp? If 2) doesn’t, you’ll need an external preamp, a commodity type of item you can get from almost anywhere. Otherwise, if you’re running RCA jacks to the one input, you’d need a simple switch for that before the data enters the Amp. If 1) isn’t the case, you’ve got larger issues that can be dealt with, just additional complexity.
@Airgetlam Why would the “simple switch” be needed for RCA?
For use of two inputs to the same set of RCA jacks. If using both the digital and analog inputs, it wouldn’t be needed, but if both devices are attempting to feed a single set of RCA jacks, some sort of switch would be required to choose which device is feeding the input.