More power for moderate listening levels?


Hi,

I can't seem to find good information regarding the effect of relatively high powered amps on low to moderate listening levels. I have a low powered class A amp that sounds wonderful at moderate volumes but not surprisingly shows signs of strain when cranked up. I am contemplating an upgrade that would bring much more power to solve this problem. However, since I don't play music really loud that often I'm wondering if the upgrade is really all that necessary. It would be worth it if the reserve power of the new amplifier improved sound quality at all levels.     

Thanks for your help,

Brian
brianbiehs
As per Stereophile: XA25 80 watts into 8 ohms; XA30.8 130 watts into 8 ohms; and you can go up from there.
My assumption is that the bigger Pass integrated would clean up the sound at higher decibels and would be a measure of protection against speaker damage if one of my family members decided to crank it when I'm not around.
It will help. But keep in mind that to go from 80 watts to 130 isn't even 3dB, and 3dB is a slightly higher volume level- its not much. You need about 10dB to seem like its 'twice as loud'. This phenomena has a name in the electronics world- its known as 'gold-plated decibels' since the price of an amplifier needed to really do the job, that also sounds as good as the one you have now, goes up exponentially. That is why a more efficient speaker is the better investment dollar-wise (and sound-wise). 
For that matter, what are your opinions on balanced vs. single-ended designs?
I'm a big fan of balanced designs (and my company was one of the first to offer them to home audio; we made the first balanced line preamps made anywhere). So my perspective might be considered skewed. But balanced circuits tend to have less problems with power supply noise and offer the potential for lower distortion as even ordered harmonics are cancelled. This means that the 3rd harmonic is the primary distortion component, and the 3rd is treated by the ear the same as the 2nd (adds a little 'bloom' but is otherwise innocuous and inaudible), but it will be at a much lower level than amps that tend to generate a 2nd harmonic as their primary component (for you math nerds, the difference between a quadratic non-linearity and a cubic non-linearity). This means the circuit can be more neutral, as the ear treats all forms of distortion as some form of tonality (hence the 'bloom' I mentioned). If the circuit is differential in nature, it will also have less noise for any given amount of gain; by a maximum of 6dB per stage of gain.


Now when you run balanced, you also have the opportunity to run balanced line interconnections. The advantage of this is that the balanced line connections have far less sonic artifact than single-ended cables (if you've ever auditioned the latter and heard differences, you know what I'm talking about) but this aspect is only realized if the equipment supports the balanced line standard, known as AES48. Most high end audio equipment doesn't seem to support the standard; my theory for this is either the manufacturer does not know it exists, regards it as too expensive, or sees it as an impediment because there are really very limited ways to do it correctly (one of the better ways to do it is with an output transformer, for example at the output of a preamp). But its nice to be able to run 30 feet of inexpensive interconnect, so you can have the amps right by the speakers and run short speaker cables- this advantage alone results in immediately audible greater resolution! Its nice to get off the interconnect merry-go-round at the same time.



Hello atmasphere,

     Awesome post.  I feel like I just went to a graduate level class, learned a lot and enjoyed it all very much.  Just excellent and I friggin mean it!

Thank you,
   Tim