I'll keep this short as I don't know the real technicals of it. Clipping occurs when an amp cannot drive the speaker to produce either really high or really low frequencies at the volume currently being asked of it. As far as my understanding goes, the amp responds by playing the signal at a lower frequency if it's clipping at high frequency, or vice versa. I'm still not sure if this damages the amp, so I tend to avoid it. The sonic difference would probably be a slight distortion of the sound at the upper and lower ranges. Most audiophiles appear to solve this problem by having an amp (or two) that will destroy the speaker long before it clips. It occurs to me I may be spouting crap here. Let's see if other, more knowledgeable folks describe it the same way...
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- 10 posts total
- 10 posts total