If you play your music between 10 and 12 on the d


If you play your music between 10 and 12 on your volume dial, does it sound better,same, etc. depending on the wattage of the amp? Say a McIntosh rated at 250 wpc compared to a McIntosh rated at 75 or 100 wpc? Does the quality of sound go up with the wpc when you listen a lower levels? or does it stay the same?
Gary

Everything else in the system being equal Cdp, speakers,etc.
garypic
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all equipment being equal, if i understand your question, in selling equipment all my life, turning it up always caused me to ring the cash register. now in saying that, i don't know what all that means, does it mean that we just like LOUD? and we also like BIG.....so to answer your question, i am not an engineer, especially an audio engineer, but i do have a understanding of what music should sound like in volume levels. the music being played should always sound as if you are listening live, how can you listen to rock , at low volumes, you can't ....nor can you listen to jazz loud...it must be moderate or you change the music. it always gets me how some people listen to music at one volume,low,med,loud,instead of listening as if they are in a music hall, club, theatre, always listen to level that you would think it would be played live. now to try to answer your question...in owning many, many amps, i always liked power, being, tube or solid state and i always tell everyone to buy as much clean power as you can afford.....dwhitt
Is this a question about the ideal impedances for the attentuator? I always thought rightly or wrongly that the attenuator performs best when it is past the 10 o'clock position - it is certainly true with a passive - not just a matter of loudness which depends as much amp and speaker.
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I know that in a passive being beyond 12 is really recommended as the output impedance gets lower and lower. Not sure if this applies to actives, but I think it might.