Big _greg yes our speakers are the same mine is the newer version of yours. I do not think I am playing them super loud either but I wanted to have some idea of what danger I am putting them in as far as clipping of the amp. My goal is not to blow then up via clipping of amp. my limited budget of $4,000 had to cover speakers, power amp, preamp,DAC, and CD source lol. As I never bought anything on Audiogon I wanted to purchase from a local seller in case there was a problem. There was no problem both sellers were honest and fair and I believe the price most reasonable both products were virtually new. I am pleased with the sound but when I see the needle go past 0/100 not knowing what that means concerned me as I do not want to blow up my speaker. Just want to understand the limits of this system.
Help a newbie understand
So the pandemic had me listening to a lot more music and as a consequence, I sold my 30-year-old but still functioning Snell c2 mk4 speakers and Adcom GFA 555 200 watts per channel amp which together sounded great ( to my uneducated and now failing hearing ) playing my digital library of CDs.I wanted to try something different.
I replaced them with Canton reference 9k monitor speakers ( which can handle 200 plus watts and a Technic su g700 integrated amp. max. 70 watts a channel. These also sound great in many different ways. By the way I bought both on Audiogon.
What I miss in the new system is its ability to play loud( I'm old and going hard of hearing) this has led me to play the amp at levels between -10 and 0 per the amps "wide range scale peak power meters" and at those levels, the needle occasionally spikes into the region slightly above 0 for fractions of a second to a second or two but not ever reaching +6( the next demarcation on the meter) per the integrated amp's meters.
My fear is frying my speaker's voice coil etc. by clipping when I play at the above level so I have two questions. First, is the headroom sufficient to prevent frying my speakers given the listening level and the volume's slight venture into going over 0 on the meter and second how do I read this "wide range scale peak power meter"?
The peak power meter's main demarcations are as follows-50/0001,-40/001,-30/01,-20/.1,-10/10, 0/100,+6/200.and under those numbers is the symbol db/%.
So I went online but could find nothing that I could understand relative to how to read this type of meter. For example, if the relationship is dB/% what does -50 represent and the % 0001?, what about 0/100,+6/200?The top numbers make no sense to me -50? -50 what no watts who's on first.
Thank you in advance for your time and expertise.
I replaced them with Canton reference 9k monitor speakers ( which can handle 200 plus watts and a Technic su g700 integrated amp. max. 70 watts a channel. These also sound great in many different ways. By the way I bought both on Audiogon.
What I miss in the new system is its ability to play loud( I'm old and going hard of hearing) this has led me to play the amp at levels between -10 and 0 per the amps "wide range scale peak power meters" and at those levels, the needle occasionally spikes into the region slightly above 0 for fractions of a second to a second or two but not ever reaching +6( the next demarcation on the meter) per the integrated amp's meters.
My fear is frying my speaker's voice coil etc. by clipping when I play at the above level so I have two questions. First, is the headroom sufficient to prevent frying my speakers given the listening level and the volume's slight venture into going over 0 on the meter and second how do I read this "wide range scale peak power meter"?
The peak power meter's main demarcations are as follows-50/0001,-40/001,-30/01,-20/.1,-10/10, 0/100,+6/200.and under those numbers is the symbol db/%.
So I went online but could find nothing that I could understand relative to how to read this type of meter. For example, if the relationship is dB/% what does -50 represent and the % 0001?, what about 0/100,+6/200?The top numbers make no sense to me -50? -50 what no watts who's on first.
Thank you in advance for your time and expertise.
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- 14 posts total
- 14 posts total