While distortion is a speaker killer along with heat in the speaker voice coil .the manufacture gives guidelines for protection and so you don't get mad at them and write nasty blogs. It is true transients can require alot of watts. I have big monoblocks that never clip due to using not at thier max which is where clipping occures.yes I watch the mcintosh 1.25 run at 1 watt and sometimes wounder why I have up to 4k in transients.if you are driving inefficient speakers then you would use the wattage. Enjoy the music and the experiments
Recommended amplification
I still don't get it.
I'm listening to a pair of Vandersteen 3A Signatures with a recommended amplification of 100-200 watts in a small, 13x14 listening room with a 10 watt Class A amp (SMSL VMV A1) and they sound just fine. Plays as loud as I'd ever listen to with ease, has control of the bass, soundstages well and generally sounds pretty fantastic.
I guess maybe dynamics but the music I listen to doens't go from pppp to fffff very often, if ever at all. I've found this to be the case with all of my speakers, regardless of their recommended amplification levels. I'm probably only using a watt or two, if at that, for most of my music listening.
So why do speaker manufacturers even list the recommended amplification numbers, does anyone know?
Thanks in advance.
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- 16 posts total
- 16 posts total