What's more important, watts or capacitance?


I'm confused about what makes an amp able to reproduce musical transients realistically. Some articles I've read state that one needs lots of power, measured in watts, to handle dynamics, especially when pushing moderately sensitive speakers. Other articles refer to capacitance as the key. Currently, I use an amp with 600W / 900W into 8/4 ohms, and if I read the specs correctly, it has 60,000 microfarrads of capacitance. An alternative I'm considering puts out 'only' about 220W / 400W but claims capacitance of 200,000 microfarrads. So which amp will sound more dynamic? FWIW, my speakers have a sensitivity of 87.5 db, avg. impedence of 4 ohms and a minimum impedence of 3 ohms. I don't listen at real high volumes, but I do like classical music at close to live levels.

Thanks for any insight!
slanski62
I agree - It is much more complicated than amount of caps and the size of transformer. Power supply capacitors are in the signal path (circuit closes thru them) and their inductance and ESR have direct effect on transients and therefore perceived loudness. Good capacitors are expensive.
This is similar to a recent thread about choosing speakers by specs. You might get a general idea about how an amp will drive a specific speaker, but in real world use you can not choose components by numbers. And even if you can predict an amp's ability to drive a load, you cant predict if it will sound worth a darn. I have seen (heard) little amps outclass amps that were much bigger by the numbers. I have also seen speakers with similar specs give completely different results from the same amp.
Look for the dynamic headroom and dynamic range spec (the loudest and softest sound it can play) many SS amps are over 100db. Look for high signal to noise ratio, some amps are 110. Look for high damping factor (this is what is supposed to "control" the speaker rather than the speaker controling the amp). Ignore THD spec, what really matters is THD + Noise. Look at the TDN+N over the power band - does the amp only spec good at one power lever and rather poor at other power output levels? Look for how long an amp can do its rattet power - often times the power rating is only for 30 seconds (If I recall the FTC requirements). Look at input impedance too - this is important for mating to the preamp- you want very high value like 100Kohms or more.
Slanski62-what speakers and power amps are you looking at?
this might be easier to ask as there maybe some agoners out there who have experience with what you are considering and can better answer your concerns with realtime feedback.
You may also see a response from Atmasphere on this question if Ralph does pay attention to his answer.
Thanks everybody for your helpful answers. My current amp is the Bryston 14B-SST2, which i use with the BAT VK42SE pre. I'm considering either the ARC HD220 or the BAT VK-600. My speakers are a custom design by Selah Audio. They're called the Visionarios and are shown on the site. My hypothesis is that with the Bryston, I'm not using it's 900W power output anyway, so maybe an amp with lower output but greater energy storage would represent an improvement.