We should reject hard-to-drive speakers more often


Sorry I know this is a bit of a rant, but come on people!!

Too many audiophiles find speakers which are hard to drive and... stick with them!

We need to reject hard-to-drive speakers as being Hi-Fi. Too many of us want our speakers to be as demanding as we are with a glass of wine. "Oh, this speaker sounds great with any amplifier, but this one needs amps that weigh more than my car, so these speakers MUST sound better..."

Speakers which may be discerning of amplifier current delivery are not necessarily any good at all at playing actual music. 

That is all.

erik_squires

My speakers are Kef Blade 1. When my 250/425 wpc amp drove them to realistic levels I thought I was golden, but as time passed and I found low volume listening was boring I decided to borrow a more beastly product and the Mc 611's are staying. I think of the Horsepower vs torque analogy but have no clue what amp measurements would apply? 

What tube amps ( tubes used in the output stage ) can " adequately " drive 1 ohm Scintillas ? I am not aware of any, and would like to know, so I may sleep better tonight. My best, MrD.

If you use an outboard device like the ZEROs then its possible.

Ralph, so the answer is = none. My best, MrD.

Back in the early 90s, TAS did a review of our MA-1 OTL amplifier. OTLs are not known for driving low impedances. The reviewer, Steven Stone, had a set of the old Apogee Full Range speakers, which were 1 Ohm. At the time we made an outboard autoformer called the ZMusic (similar to the ZEROs) that we installed between the amp and speaker- the ZMusic had a 1 Ohm tap. The result drove the Full Ranges quite well- despite the impedance, they otherwise were a resistive load and didn't need a lot of power. Steve commented it was the first time he had ever heard the speaker with a tube amplifier. 

in your experience ralph, when an autoformer is used to better couple tube amps with lower impedance speakers, is there a meaningful sonic penalty? seems to me that what is happening is many many more metal windings are being placed between tube amp's built in transformer (leaving aside the otl’s for a moment) -- and so my guess is that there must be more of the classic wooly, expansive, slightly echo-y transformer sound that is introduced into the music, more or less....

of course, this point and my question is moot for speakers that could never be driven by the tube amp in the first place, but have you done an experiment with a more ’normal’ higher impedance speaker... then adding the autoformer ... then trying hearing the sonic change from the additional transformer present in the chain?

just curious