A big part of the answer to this would be, what the listener does with the volume. A lot of us get by doing this all the time. With movies, it's riskier. In my one system for TV, if I switch my sub on, I hear a lot of deep bass that's there (some movies) that my speakers won't reproduce. There may be deep bass moving your woofers a lot, eating a ton of power that you may not realize, since they won't reproduce the sound (although the woofers are moving), and you can't hear it.
It's important to have plenty of power, and important to recognize when something no matter how small, doesn't sound right. You need to lower the volume quickly, and keep it low enough to make sure that distortion never appears again. If you have a good ear, and are careful, you should be OK. Running an underpowered amp out of power can cause damage quickly.
It's important to have plenty of power, and important to recognize when something no matter how small, doesn't sound right. You need to lower the volume quickly, and keep it low enough to make sure that distortion never appears again. If you have a good ear, and are careful, you should be OK. Running an underpowered amp out of power can cause damage quickly.