Power supply limiting would be the prefered scenario as the amp would only be clipping the waveform under this condition. Exceeding the maximum current capability of the output devices will likely result in their immediate destruction.
Scotty
Hi Scotty,
I think you are being a bit simplistic here. Obviously, if you exceed the maximum current capability of the output devices, they will self-destruct. However, if the DC voltage rails in the amplifier are set so that, with an X ohm speaker, not more than the rated output device current can be delivered, the output devices will not destruct.
Of course, if you use this amp to drive an X/2 ohm speaker, it will have to output more current and so may be driven to destruction!
Lets do some maths (the info for which has come from a recent post on AA's MUG Forum which referenced an excellent Audioholics article by Dan Banquer entitled "The High Instantaneous Current Spec" - which I hadn't read when I originally posted):
* say the speaker has a uniform impedance of 3 ohms (I know most speakers do not exhibit a uniform impedance curve but Maggies nearly do - and they're almost entirely a resistive load, with little inductance).
* an amp capable of delivering 300w into a 3 ohm speaker will have an output current of 10 ohms (P = I^2 x R).
* the output voltage will be 30v (P = V^2 / R).
If the amp had a PS capable of delivering 20 amps (lets ignore electrical losses, just to make it easy!

) then the "extra" PS capability will never be used.
IE. the output of the amp is limited by the DC volts the power rails run at ... not by the current capacity of the PS (ie. the rectifiers or mains transformer). This scenario is my example #2 and I would suggest this is the most common situation for good power amplifiers?
If you turn up the pre-amp volume control in this scenario then, yes, the power amp will clip as it is trying to output more voltage than the DC rails have available.
I guess my question is ... will my scenario #1 - where the output of the amp is PS current limited, because the power supply is under-specced - result in the amplifier clipping? It is not trying to produce more output volts than the DC rails allow it to ... but it is being "starved" of current.
So it certainly won't sound good but maybe it'll sound better coz it's not clipping?
Regards,
Andy