Thanks Ralph. Al (Almarg) and I were hoping you'd chime in. Did you get a chance to look at the Thomas Mayer article in the URL link above. Mayer presents an interesting option relating to hooking up an amp's output taps. The option really pertains to speakers that have two sets of terminals for bi-wiring or bi-amping like my Paradigm Sig. 8s. Any thoughts??
I'd like to turn around your observation that "if there is a 4-ohm load on the 8 ohm tap, it will cut the load impedance on the tubes by half- and they will make less power and more distortion as a result." What happens if I use the 4 ohm tap and the amp is driving speaker impedance loads in the upper frequencies ranging from 8 to 20 ohms?
Let me share my anecdotal reactions when trying the different taps of my Ref 150:
(1) When using the 16 ohm taps, the music is open and detailed, but bass is clearly thin. I'm not sure about this, but while the music is open and detailed, it seems like the high end is a little too light. Btw, the S8's impedance drops to about 5 or 6 ohms north of 5K Hz.
(2) When using the 4 ohm tap, bass is deeper and a little tighter, but the midrange and treble are darker. Detail and imaging is fair.
(3) The 8 ohm tap seems to be the best compromise. I use a subwoofer so I can supplement SPL below 50 Hz. Bass is not as tight as off the 4 ohm tap, but I get more detail and better imaging.
So Ralph, is picking a particular amplifier tap an exercise best described as choosing the tap which sounds best, or choosing a tap that sounds the least worst.
Last point -- take a look at the Stereophile 2013 list of Class A recommended speakers. As an example, JA measured the B&W 800 D impedance as literally off the chart at certain frequencies. A couple of negative phase angle saddles at -67 degrees too. I suspect, not a very tube friendly speaker.
The URL link is here:
http://www.stereophile.com/content/bampw-800-diamond-loudspeaker-measurements
Thanks for the insights.
Bruce
I'd like to turn around your observation that "if there is a 4-ohm load on the 8 ohm tap, it will cut the load impedance on the tubes by half- and they will make less power and more distortion as a result." What happens if I use the 4 ohm tap and the amp is driving speaker impedance loads in the upper frequencies ranging from 8 to 20 ohms?
Let me share my anecdotal reactions when trying the different taps of my Ref 150:
(1) When using the 16 ohm taps, the music is open and detailed, but bass is clearly thin. I'm not sure about this, but while the music is open and detailed, it seems like the high end is a little too light. Btw, the S8's impedance drops to about 5 or 6 ohms north of 5K Hz.
(2) When using the 4 ohm tap, bass is deeper and a little tighter, but the midrange and treble are darker. Detail and imaging is fair.
(3) The 8 ohm tap seems to be the best compromise. I use a subwoofer so I can supplement SPL below 50 Hz. Bass is not as tight as off the 4 ohm tap, but I get more detail and better imaging.
So Ralph, is picking a particular amplifier tap an exercise best described as choosing the tap which sounds best, or choosing a tap that sounds the least worst.
Last point -- take a look at the Stereophile 2013 list of Class A recommended speakers. As an example, JA measured the B&W 800 D impedance as literally off the chart at certain frequencies. A couple of negative phase angle saddles at -67 degrees too. I suspect, not a very tube friendly speaker.
The URL link is here:
http://www.stereophile.com/content/bampw-800-diamond-loudspeaker-measurements
Thanks for the insights.
Bruce