So, wanted to make things a little more full.
One of the spec’s commonly sited is S/N (signal to noise) or related THD+n (Total Harmonic Distortion + noise). The problem with Signal to Noise is that it is often cited at full power, and not at a more reasonable amount, like 1 watt.
So, a 1000 watt amplifier can claim 10 dB more S/N than say a 100 Watt amplifier that sounds exactly as noisy. The full power S/N ratio becomes useless for comparing amps and how quiet they are. What I wish reviewers and manufacturers did more consistently is rate the S/N at 1 watt or 10 watts. Something small so we can compare what we’ll actually hear.
Distortion is also something that tends to go down as power goes up until the limit of the amp is reached. This is why these figures can be misleading. This is something stereophile does a little better, in showing graphs of THD vs. power output. Now we can at least look at charts to compare noise and distortion as more usable power outputs.
The other thing, I think that the amplifier community is having a hard time keeping it’s prices up to make boutique manufacturing possible. This makes it necessary to have big differentiation. For instance, having a 1,400 watt amplifier is cool and all, but in my living room, at my listening levels does it mean my sound is better than my 250 W amps?
I don’t really know all the answers to these questions at all. I’m just sharing where I start to scratch my head. :)
Best,
E
One of the spec’s commonly sited is S/N (signal to noise) or related THD+n (Total Harmonic Distortion + noise). The problem with Signal to Noise is that it is often cited at full power, and not at a more reasonable amount, like 1 watt.
So, a 1000 watt amplifier can claim 10 dB more S/N than say a 100 Watt amplifier that sounds exactly as noisy. The full power S/N ratio becomes useless for comparing amps and how quiet they are. What I wish reviewers and manufacturers did more consistently is rate the S/N at 1 watt or 10 watts. Something small so we can compare what we’ll actually hear.
Distortion is also something that tends to go down as power goes up until the limit of the amp is reached. This is why these figures can be misleading. This is something stereophile does a little better, in showing graphs of THD vs. power output. Now we can at least look at charts to compare noise and distortion as more usable power outputs.
The other thing, I think that the amplifier community is having a hard time keeping it’s prices up to make boutique manufacturing possible. This makes it necessary to have big differentiation. For instance, having a 1,400 watt amplifier is cool and all, but in my living room, at my listening levels does it mean my sound is better than my 250 W amps?
I don’t really know all the answers to these questions at all. I’m just sharing where I start to scratch my head. :)
Best,
E