I thought I could get by under similar circumstances with a fairly high power stereo tube amp driving a pair of speakers with 81 db efficiency and a 3 ohm load. It was great if the music was quiet or solo acoustic but it didn't work worth a darn on anything requiring more "ooomph" such as symphonic. I didn't want to get rid of my tubes and was able to drive the mids/tweets with tubes and SS on the woofer... This happened to work great in my case and I got the best of both worlds but it is often difficult to get tubes and SS to mate well.
Is a Tube Amp Capable of High Current?
I need your help.
I have a pair of VERY inefficient speakers (Platinum Solos), but am also a big fan of tubes. I know that tubes can work with power-hungry speakers as I have done it with a pair of Magnepans...BUT...I'm not certain that it will work in this case.
The speakers are rated at 84db with a nominal impedence of 6 ohms.
I am purchasing an Audio Research D-125 which is rated at 115wpc.
I know that people always say that "tube watts" are more powerful than solid state watts, but I'm not really sure what that means. I also always hear people say that you need a "high current" amp. I've always taken this to refer to solid state, but can this be true of tube amps as well? Is the ARC D-125 high current?
I'm not a head-banger and certainly prefer quality over quantity when it comes to sound. Also, my room is not particularly huge, so that shouldn't be too big of a factor.
I need your advice. Am I setting myself up for disappointment? Does a load like this inherently require solid state amplification?
Thanks!
I have a pair of VERY inefficient speakers (Platinum Solos), but am also a big fan of tubes. I know that tubes can work with power-hungry speakers as I have done it with a pair of Magnepans...BUT...I'm not certain that it will work in this case.
The speakers are rated at 84db with a nominal impedence of 6 ohms.
I am purchasing an Audio Research D-125 which is rated at 115wpc.
I know that people always say that "tube watts" are more powerful than solid state watts, but I'm not really sure what that means. I also always hear people say that you need a "high current" amp. I've always taken this to refer to solid state, but can this be true of tube amps as well? Is the ARC D-125 high current?
I'm not a head-banger and certainly prefer quality over quantity when it comes to sound. Also, my room is not particularly huge, so that shouldn't be too big of a factor.
I need your advice. Am I setting myself up for disappointment? Does a load like this inherently require solid state amplification?
Thanks!
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- 19 posts total
- 19 posts total