Acoustic reflex seems like a natural defense system against what I have read where 80-85 db is the general limit for safe listening without causing damage to hearing.
It is very possible that when sound seems to change systematically over time, at least part of it is due to our hearing senses adapting or changing as needed.
We tend to think of many things like this as a constant, but no doubt people react differently to things at different times. WHy would hearing be any different?
Thanks to the PSB owner for chiming in. I do not doubt both amps used are underpowered to drive the nominal 4 ohm load. Whether that accounts for all that is being heard is a different story.
One might think any 200 w/ch amp is up to the task of driving most any speaker optimally (not just well). One would be wrong. I've had 360 w/ch and 180 w/ch amps that cannot.
The current delivery and ability to double down at 4 ohms matters. If the OPs MF amp could do that, it would likely warrant being in the published specs. That and being a conventional Class A/B type integrated, which most always has physical constraints that limit what can be done with power supply in close proximity to pre-amp circuitry, I am very confident that it does not.
It is very possible that when sound seems to change systematically over time, at least part of it is due to our hearing senses adapting or changing as needed.
We tend to think of many things like this as a constant, but no doubt people react differently to things at different times. WHy would hearing be any different?
Thanks to the PSB owner for chiming in. I do not doubt both amps used are underpowered to drive the nominal 4 ohm load. Whether that accounts for all that is being heard is a different story.
One might think any 200 w/ch amp is up to the task of driving most any speaker optimally (not just well). One would be wrong. I've had 360 w/ch and 180 w/ch amps that cannot.
The current delivery and ability to double down at 4 ohms matters. If the OPs MF amp could do that, it would likely warrant being in the published specs. That and being a conventional Class A/B type integrated, which most always has physical constraints that limit what can be done with power supply in close proximity to pre-amp circuitry, I am very confident that it does not.