Once again I yap about the benefit of Level Controls for ANY speaker in ANY room (L-Pads, not POTs)
from the article, emphasis mine"
"The first change was to use a more powerful amplifier. Better stability and control, as well as a superior overall tonal balance, was found using the much more powerful Krell KSA-250 (its output impedance is no slouch either, being 0.13 ohms at 20Hz). Connected to this powerhouse, the Type Bs were smoother, less hard, more open, and totally effortless. This is no surprise—the KSA-250 can put out close to 1000Wpc into the speaker’s impedance minima of 2.7 ohms (tweeter-level control set to maximum). As JA had mentioned to me, the KSA-250 imposes an "iron grip" on the Type B’s drivers, making it an excellent choice for this loudspeaker in my listening barn—er, room.
Second, a careful adjustment of the tweeter-level control greatly helped me adjust the tonal balance. I found that boosting the treble slightly by turning the level control from 12 to 2 o’clock allowed the speaker to "open up" without becoming shrill.
Third, I changed the speaker’s position, moving them 1’ farther out from the back wall. This move proved very important. Fourth, I found that the Type Bs produced the widest, deepest soundstage and best tonal balance when set up with bi-wired speaker cables."
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Today, inexpensive sound pressure meters combined with test cd with individual frequencies are easy for anyone to see what is actually happening: ANY SPEAKER IN ANY ROOM
Any variations from different speaker poisitioning/listener chair positioning can be seen with meter/test cd.
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Regarding item 1 above: more power in reserve:
My friend just bought a McIntosh MC7270, with BIG Meters! 270 wpc, then McIntosh Power Guard steps in to prevent clipping.
JSE Infinite Slope, Model 2,Speaker’s efficiency over 90, I cannot remember specifically).
We played something dynamic, loud, in large space:
power used: avg 2.7 watts; shoot up to 27 wpc frequently; occasionally shot up to 200 wpc used, and sometimes Power Guard was engaged indicating the full 270 wpc was exceeded.
He visited a big McIntosh dealer, they had a pair of Mono Blocks, 2000 wpc driving very tall McIntosh speakers. Meters indicated avg 20 wpc, occasional spikes.
Happily my 16 ohm horn speakers are very efficient, sensitivity definitely over 100, perhaps 103+. I used 30 wpc tubes for many years (without meters). Now 45 wpc. I feel better having more in reserve, but that’s the most heat I want, everything is a balanced decision.
I do not understand thinking low power, i,e, 8 wpc is a good idea, unless small room, only low volume listening because dynamic peaks do need instantaneous reserves, relative to volume desired.