parasound 1500A:
Continuous Power Output - Stereo:
205 Watts RMS x 2, 20 Hz-20 kHz, 8 Ω, both channels driven
315 watts RMS x 2, 20 Hz - 20 kHz, 4 Ω, both channels driven
Specs say 60 w peak current which sounds good but I suspect much less on average in real life.
Ideally you want the amp to double down from 8 to 4 ohms ie 410 w/ch at 4ohm.
From that spec alone the parasound is probably not the best match to get the best out of most OHMs which from impedance curves I’ve seen can have a drop down to 4 ohm or so in the very demanding mid bass region.
Higher efficiency with the other OHMs no doubt helps. that is what they are designed to do.
You need very robust power supplies capable of fairly continuous high current delivery in an amp to be able to double down to 4 ohms best.
I had an amp with similar power specs originally, a Carver m4.0t 330 or so watts into 8ohm but significant fall off at 4ohm. The sound with my big OHMs was as you describe, loud but not great. Somewhat muddled, less dynamic and less articulate bass. This amp was designed with a tube amp like transfer function. Most tube amps would have similar issues which is why sub with high pass filter on the mains is required for optimal results if using most OHMs with a tube amp. Same Carver amp worked nicely with Magnepans I had prior which needed power but not current.
Continuous Power Output - Stereo:
205 Watts RMS x 2, 20 Hz-20 kHz, 8 Ω, both channels driven
315 watts RMS x 2, 20 Hz - 20 kHz, 4 Ω, both channels driven
Specs say 60 w peak current which sounds good but I suspect much less on average in real life.
Ideally you want the amp to double down from 8 to 4 ohms ie 410 w/ch at 4ohm.
From that spec alone the parasound is probably not the best match to get the best out of most OHMs which from impedance curves I’ve seen can have a drop down to 4 ohm or so in the very demanding mid bass region.
Higher efficiency with the other OHMs no doubt helps. that is what they are designed to do.
You need very robust power supplies capable of fairly continuous high current delivery in an amp to be able to double down to 4 ohms best.
I had an amp with similar power specs originally, a Carver m4.0t 330 or so watts into 8ohm but significant fall off at 4ohm. The sound with my big OHMs was as you describe, loud but not great. Somewhat muddled, less dynamic and less articulate bass. This amp was designed with a tube amp like transfer function. Most tube amps would have similar issues which is why sub with high pass filter on the mains is required for optimal results if using most OHMs with a tube amp. Same Carver amp worked nicely with Magnepans I had prior which needed power but not current.