garylkoh
WBF Technical Expert (Speakers & Audio Equipment)
Hi Gary,
Let me open a can of worms here...and something on behalf of us non-techies. I totally understand and accept (from experience) that endless reserves of power can be exceptionally important in certain systems. The question i have for you is this:
- in your mind, from an engineering and audio perspective, is there much difference in your mind for Martin Logans (or in my case big Wilsons) between a 200 watt amp with ridiculous headroom (5000watt peak into 0.5 ohm load and 400,000 mf capacitance)...and a high quality 1000 watt amp (also doubling down, etc), all else being relatively equal (ie same quality of capacitors, transistors, isolation, etc)...
Once one passes the simple "double watts to add 3db math" test...and can get to, say, 120db of constant sound without strain...what then is the difference from a sound perspective between 200watts and 1000? I am not questioning whether there is or not (i fully admit i do not know)...and wish to learn from someone with serious experence (and who is actually building a 1000+ watt amp).
thanks for any 'simple man's' explanations!
Lloyd,
I think it does make a difference, but I'll have to admit that I'm still learning here. I'm only 5 years into being a full-time audio designer. I spent the first two learning the basics (almost a university degree course on its own!!) and the last three exploring uncharted or less-charted territory. We've gone over 25 pages on the Power thread here, with no answer in sight. Unfortunately, I still haven't found a limit of watts which will continue to improve my own G7p (a 2-way bookshelf speaker) - even though, theoretically when playing at average pleasant listening levels, I don't need more than a watt.