Why has amplifier power become a big issue


Back in the day I drove my Advent speakers that were very inefficient with 30 watts per channel. Today I run Vandersteen 2 ce speakers which are more efficient then the old Advents with 50 watts per channel and way more current. By most this is underpowering the Vandersteens, what has changed?
digepix

I blame it on the Bose 901. Prior to the introduction of that power-hungry loudspeaker, a 50 or 60 watt (per channel) amplifier was considered all a speaker, even the inefficient acoustic suspension designs of the day such as the Acoustic Research 3a, needed. Plus, that’s about as powerful an amp as was available at the time, one exception being the McIntosh MC2100 (105w/ch), which I owned. That all changed with the appearance of the Phase Linear 700 (350w/ch). The power race was on, along with as-low-as-possible-no-matter-the-sonic-penalty low test-bench distortion figures.

J. Gordon Holt with his Stereophile Magazine alone, until Harry Pearson published the first issue of The Absolute Sound in 1973, fought against the insanity that followed. Luckily, at about the same time, the emergence of high end amplifiers, designed for sound quality into speakers rather than ultra-low distortion specs into test-bench simulated speaker loads, were beginning to appear in the new audiophile dealer network springing up around the country, selling the pioneering Audio Research Corporation products (with their tube amps, tubes having been abandoned by the hi-fi industry years before) and other perfectionist sound quality designs.

It’s important to remember that a doubling of output power, all else being equal, increases SPL by only 3dB. A 300w amp, identical in every way to a 150w one save power output, provides only a 3dB increase in sound. Big deal.

Why has amplifier power become a big issue

digepix
When you say power, there’s two types, current and wattage. You can have 300w in a small package with no current. But to get that 300w with great current as well, things start to grow, so does your electric bill.
It’s because many hiend speakers themselves have become harder and harder to drive, many of Wilson ect droping down to sometimes 1 or even less ohms, unheard of back in the day. They need both wattage and current.
And it became progressivly worse since those Avent days, not a bad thing as todays harder to drive speakers sound very good compare to the old sludge boxes of yester year.

Cheers George
If you choose speakers of high efficiency, 100db+ you can use amps with just a few watts of power. Roger Russel of Mcintosh speaker fame talked about how he was tasked with building speakers that could handle 100's of watts. The reason? To sell big power Amps that they also produced. Speakers can be had with very high efficiency and that's part of the reason the single ended amp is being made by quite a few companies these days.

Its a matter of choice, sure if you want a 500 watt class A Pass Amp/Space Heater its readily available... He also has tiny 5 watt amps under the First Watt brand. 
I guess that for my room in my NYC apartment listening to the music I listen to (small jazz quartet/quintet) the 50 watt amp does it for me. I have other amps up to 200 watts per channel from other manufacturers that I can use if the mood strikes. I just wanted to ask to see what has changed in peoples perception of sound that keeps the power output on some amps going up. Vandersteens aren't the most efficient speakers out but they don't present to many problems for most amps. I know listening to volumes greater than 85 db for long periods of time isn't great for your hearing. I listen at volumes that require a couple of watts and the transients require maybe 20 watts for short bursts and that can be covered by my 50 watt amp, no?
Nothings has really changed.  Loudspeakers with a sensitivity  in the mid-80s will sound perfectly fine with 30-50wpc.  Of course these same loudspeakers will sound better with 150-200wpc when played at louder volume levels.  However, if your typical listen level is 75-85dB, then 30-50wpc is sufficient for most types of music.

It's been my experience that if high volumes levels are required that high sensitivity loudspeakers is a better route than high wattage amps.