Atmasphere: Most tubes go into "soft clipping" ( rounded edges ) because they don't have the necessary speed / bandwidth to reproduce the sharp edges that make up a heavily clipped sine wave aka a square wave. Then again, i'm not telling you anything that you don't already know, so this is really for everyone else reading this thread : )
Other than that, i've always been a proponent of having "MEGA" overhead in system capacity. I learned a LONG time ago that it is not sheer spl's that make things sound "loud" and / or "aggressive", but distortion. By using high powered amps that are never pushed, and speakers that aren't easily driven into compression, one can listen at astonishingly high spl's with little to no fatigue. Not only that, but it doesn't sound nearly as loud as it really is. That's because the system is free of distortion, which is what adds the apparent volume that brings both fatigue and ear strain with it.
As far as Muralman's comments go, most good quality switching amps can sound quite clean even when spl's are roaring. This has to do with their reduced duty cycle, which minimizes thermal stress. When it comes to SS amps, the faster that you can dissipate heat, the better off you are. Both sonically and in terms of product lifespan. Sean
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Other than that, i've always been a proponent of having "MEGA" overhead in system capacity. I learned a LONG time ago that it is not sheer spl's that make things sound "loud" and / or "aggressive", but distortion. By using high powered amps that are never pushed, and speakers that aren't easily driven into compression, one can listen at astonishingly high spl's with little to no fatigue. Not only that, but it doesn't sound nearly as loud as it really is. That's because the system is free of distortion, which is what adds the apparent volume that brings both fatigue and ear strain with it.
As far as Muralman's comments go, most good quality switching amps can sound quite clean even when spl's are roaring. This has to do with their reduced duty cycle, which minimizes thermal stress. When it comes to SS amps, the faster that you can dissipate heat, the better off you are. Both sonically and in terms of product lifespan. Sean
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