I was introduced to Quad 57s in the 90s and listened to quite a few other enthusiasts setups.
The best set up I heard was with either the Quads tube amps or Luxman equivalent to the quads. I had the Quads on the 15 ohm tap. This is a matched system. It was very immediate and detailed. All the other Tube amps created smaller dynamic swings and put you more in the back row of the concert hall. I preferred to be nearer the front row. This was to my taste but is not ever ones cup of tea.
Too little power from a tube amp will just sound poor when over taxed. It should not damage the panels.
A tale of caution about too much power.
My wife left the quads on for a week when I went on a business trip, burning out the Quads tubes. I used an Audiolab transistor amp (60 watts per channel) while I waited for new tubes. My wife turned the Audiolab amp up and telephoned me at work to say that the 57s sounded distorted - She blow up the treble panels on Both. So if you use a more powerful amp then be very careful that you turn them down when they distort (you should already have the 57s snubber circuit mode installed if they are latter Quads 57s - this is a diode and a resistor network that kick in when the panels see too much voltage and protects the panels hence you hear the distortion and turn them down. If you do not turn them down in a reasonable time then the diode will burn out leaving the panels unprotected to voltage spikes.
hope this helps
Russell b
The best set up I heard was with either the Quads tube amps or Luxman equivalent to the quads. I had the Quads on the 15 ohm tap. This is a matched system. It was very immediate and detailed. All the other Tube amps created smaller dynamic swings and put you more in the back row of the concert hall. I preferred to be nearer the front row. This was to my taste but is not ever ones cup of tea.
Too little power from a tube amp will just sound poor when over taxed. It should not damage the panels.
A tale of caution about too much power.
My wife left the quads on for a week when I went on a business trip, burning out the Quads tubes. I used an Audiolab transistor amp (60 watts per channel) while I waited for new tubes. My wife turned the Audiolab amp up and telephoned me at work to say that the 57s sounded distorted - She blow up the treble panels on Both. So if you use a more powerful amp then be very careful that you turn them down when they distort (you should already have the 57s snubber circuit mode installed if they are latter Quads 57s - this is a diode and a resistor network that kick in when the panels see too much voltage and protects the panels hence you hear the distortion and turn them down. If you do not turn them down in a reasonable time then the diode will burn out leaving the panels unprotected to voltage spikes.
hope this helps
Russell b