For efficient speakers, how much difference does an amp really make?


I have ascend sierra RAAL tower speakers with 90-93db efficiency and 300W continuous power handling. I’m powering them with dual outlaw M2200 monoblock class AB/G amps rated at 200W into 8 ohms. It sounds good...but i can’t help but wondering if a different amp would provide greater clarity and low-end grunt.

I have been curious about an older adcom amp like the GFA-555 II or perhaps a parasound halo amp like the A23. 

To those who have had multiple amps in your setup, did you find significant sonic differences between amps, or is a subtle thing? I don’t want to start collecting amps, but I don’t want to deny myself the chance to improve my system further. Thoughts?
dtrandall
I've compared my little Dennis Had Firebottle amp to other tube and SS stuff and have concluded that there's something about a well made single ended tube amp that just sounds musically right, and no push pull amp I've used over the years even comes close, including tube amps. I'm fine being tied to efficient speakers as they also seem to sound better than otherwise, and a lower powered SET or SEP matched with the right efficient speakers will work to make music play loud and clear with no transistor glare or artifice...I do use a few hundred SS watts for my subs though...matches perfectly.
my audiolab 6000A preamp can output a maximum of 2.3V. I will take a look at the Adcom 565SE. Sadly, it does not have a true balanced XLR output, but that is certainly a feature i’m considering for down the road.
93db speakers are not that efficient. They will take some power to drive. I use Altec speakers that are around 99db and drive them with Mac MC40 monoblock tube amps. At normal listening levels (loud) I'm not using even a watt of power. If I crank them up till I start to hear some distortion (clipping) they are way to loud.
When I got into this hobby I was always chasing bigger amps, more power, had in-efficient speakers and thought that was the only answer. After a buddy showed me what a few watts on some Klipsch horn speakers could do I had to re-evaluate my thinking.
I also wonder on an amp that is designed for say 300watts, just how good is that first watt of power. Are the solid state devices really that linear at levels just a tiny fraction of their rated power? At 1 watt it would be running at 1/300 of it's rating and on softer passages less that 1/3000 of it's rating. Tubes seem pretty immune to that sort of thing, at least my Mac's are.

Billwojo

For high efficiency speakers, amps ar a big deal. IMO, an amps output "gain" is key. Or should I say, the combination of your pre and amp's output gain. If really high (especially with tubes), you will be more prone to hear hiss, noise, etc with high efficient speakers. 
The gain structure of the current model Adcom amps are all below 30 db, I believe.  The 565SE's gain is 27 db.  When I was checking out the input sensitivity of this amp, I noticed what appeared to be an error as the Adcom spec page lists it at 12.1 volts input for unity power.  I emailed Adcom and they responded within a few hours, saying the spec is actually 2.1 volts.  By way of comparison, the 555SE is 1.7 volts.

I’ve owned both the Ascend Acoustics Sierra 1 and Sierra 2 with the Raal Ribbon Tweeter. The brand is meticulously designed and tested. The components employed are anything but off the shelf, and it shows. When I put the Sierra 2 up against my Paradigm Monitor 7 V3(a tower), I was almost shocked.

Shocked at the mediocre sound I had been putting up with for about a decade. But the Monitor 7 was merely designed to be a slightly better option to the big box options back in 2003, and the industry was turned on its head since then. Still, it demonstrated to be that the Ascend Sierra 2 was a serious speaker.

Anyway, I’ve never heard the Sierra Tower, which is a different animal from David Fabrikant’s various bookshelf designs. Typically they were all easy loads, benign phase angles, and relatively inefficient. I haven’t owned my Sierras for about 3 years now, so haven’t kept up with what they’ve been up to.