Describe ube sound vs solid state


What are the charesterics in comparing each of these?
nyaudio98
Tubes become a more desirable option to me if lower volume listening will be the norm.

It's certainly doable but I would not bother with a tube amp if higher volume listening is the norm. That's just me. Too many special considerations when putting a system designed to go loud and clear together. Some might consider it fun or preferable but I don't see any clear advantage in most cases.

I would also agree that tube lovers might often be motivated by the quest for a certain special kind of sound more so than just good clean sound.
Bottom line is its more about what one is after than the technology itself. Both at their best sound more similar than different but each also does its thing best differently. That's pretty much what makes the world go around.
^Them it would appear that the Mac 30 is not capable of adapting to the variable impedance swings of typical loudspeakers without deviating from linear frequency response?

No, not at all, unless the amp is set up on the wrong tap.

If the speaker is 4 ohms in the bass and 8 or 16 ohms in the highs, you put it on the 4 ohm tap and the bass will be correct as well as the highs. It will be just as flat as a transistor amp on the same speaker.
^So for example; with a dynamic loudspeaker speaker with a nominal 8 Ohm load with dips to 4 Ohms and peaks to 16 Ohms; the Mac 30 will double it's power output into 4 Ohms and halve it's power output into 16 Ohms?
^^ The nature of the dips should be examined. If at crossover points which is a common point of a dip, they will be of no consequence.

The amplifier power will be signal dependent of course, and the output into 8 ohms will be 1/2 of its 4 ohm power (30 watts) and 1/4 of that into 16 ohms if the signal is full bandwidth.

IOW, feedback causes an adaptive response in the amplifier.