Nominal power is a range provided by the manufacturer
of the average power needed to drive the speaker. I think of it more like a suggestion because sensitivity and impedance of the speaker are the most important specs.
I agree 87dB is a hard to drive load for your amp. I read in a review of the speakers that impedance stays between 4 and 8 ohms across the frequency spectrum. This also is telling that more power will be beneficial. The 4 ohm low impedance and low sensitivity would be better served with a higher power amp; low impedance requires more power, especially in the bass frequencies. As stated above, doubling the amp power would only give you 3dB more gain. So if you like these speakers I would look for a SS amp higher than 140wpc. More power drives the bass with more authority and music will sound fuller, and will reveal more from your components.
The risk you asked about is when using an underpowered amp at a high volume it can cause the amp to clip which produces distortion and possible damage to the drivers in the speakers.
of the average power needed to drive the speaker. I think of it more like a suggestion because sensitivity and impedance of the speaker are the most important specs.
I agree 87dB is a hard to drive load for your amp. I read in a review of the speakers that impedance stays between 4 and 8 ohms across the frequency spectrum. This also is telling that more power will be beneficial. The 4 ohm low impedance and low sensitivity would be better served with a higher power amp; low impedance requires more power, especially in the bass frequencies. As stated above, doubling the amp power would only give you 3dB more gain. So if you like these speakers I would look for a SS amp higher than 140wpc. More power drives the bass with more authority and music will sound fuller, and will reveal more from your components.
The risk you asked about is when using an underpowered amp at a high volume it can cause the amp to clip which produces distortion and possible damage to the drivers in the speakers.