Class A 30 Watt Amps: Are they enough to drive my book shelfs?


Currently looking at buying a Pass Labs XA 30.5 to drive my Kef 201/2 speakers which are rated at 86 DB sensitivity.  Is this a bad move?
puffbojie
@almarg 
Yes, loss will be 6.54dB, but from rated sensitivity of one speaker it will be only 3.54dB.  For 2m listening distance, that they likely assumed as an average, there will be no error.  Sound level at listening position will be the same as rated sensitivity.

In case on hand each speaker sensitivity is 86dB. Two of them playing at the same time add +3dB, room adds +3dB and distance of 2m causes 6dB drop resulting in 86dB sound level at listening position when 2.83V is applied to both speakers.  Am I missing something?
@kijanki

OK. I see what you are saying. What it comes down to is that we have been interpreting the Benchmark statement differently. And both interpretations are reasonable, IMO, as long as each interpretation is properly understood and applied.

You are interpreting their statement such that:

In case on hand each speaker sensitivity is 86dB. Two of them playing at the same time add +3dB, room adds +3dB and distance of 2m causes 6dB drop resulting in 86dB sound level at listening position when 2.83V is applied to both speakers.

I agree with this statement, but I have been interpreting Benchmark’s statement differently, with my interpretation having been indicated at the end of my previous post. As I say, though, I think neither interpretation of Benchmark’s statement (yours and mine) is unreasonable.

In any event, though, the 101.7 db and 107.7 db numbers I originally stated in my response to the OP do in fact reflect the presence of two speakers.

Best regards,
-- Al
In my own personal experience, "enough" never does the trick with amps. Having the most quality power has always given me the most satisfaction - maybe it's the extra ability of the amp, extra headroom...or maybe it's all just in my head.