Finding (calculating?) speaker and amp impedance


I'm starting to understand why speakers with high efficiency and perhaps more importantly a flat impedance curve work well with tube amps.

If not published by the vendor/manufacturer, is there a way to determine the impedance curve from the specs that are provided?

Also, I have a pair of Magnepans that need high current amplification.

Is there a way to determine the current of an amplifier from vendor/manufacturer provided specs?

Thanks everyone!

hleeid

@nonoise True, but you also have to then accept the ADC / DAC of the amp. If you want to keep an analog chain after that DAC you spent 2 years pickinmg out this tech is wrong for you. :)

@erik_squires , I have zero issues with the sound of the amp and it's internal ADC/DAC. To my way of thinking, that's way overthinking the problems one might encounter 2 years down the line. I've never been into the DAC flavor of the month club. 

All the best,
Nonoise

@erik_squires 

Another, and I've seen Focal do this, is that a difficult to drive speaker is seen as "discerning."  No, I'm not going over this detail, either you believe me or you do not, but reviewers give far too much positive press to a speaker that shows you the difference between an integrated and million dollar monoblock. 

I was afraid to but almost said something along these lines in my earlier post. A hard to drive speaker can give a very expensive amp a reason to exist, and the amp can then complement the speaker's "revealing" capabilities. So both sort of act together in a mutual appreciation club. But I recall some speaker manufacturer's mantra that "watts are cheap!" to explain why he designed inefficient speakers. Apparently he thought inefficient designs sounded better overall if you just gave them enough cheap watts. 

@asctim 

A hard to drive speaker can give a very expensive amp a reason to exist, and the amp can then complement the speaker’s "revealing" capabilities. So both sort of act together

I believe that there is solid reasoning to support this suspicion. One would indeed necessitate the other.

Charles