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Steve,If you haven't already, I'd suggest looking beyond just the watt rating of the amplifier. I'm in complete agreement that a high watt amplifier is necessary for a Tempest application, but you might also want to consider the specification of "damping factor" when looking for a proper amplifier.Damping factor can loosely be defined as an amplfiier's ability to control the woofer, and an amplifier with a high damping factor will add quite a bit of tightness and musical satisfaction to a subwoofer ...
I've used several different amps to drive my TN 1220's, and while they do appreciate a lot of power, they don't really seem that difficult to drive. The Carver amp I used to use to drive them for a while didn't have a terribly high damping factor yet worked magnificently. I'm guessing the LA II won't have any problem, either. Again, the lack of a volume knob to trim the level could be an issue, depending on your setup.I agree, though, that you don't want an amp that's too "loose" in the bottom end. ...
The thing is speakers are not purely resistive loads but rather they rise and fall at different frequencies so while your speaker may nominally be a 8 ohm speaker it could go from 2 ohms to over 50 ohms depending on frequency. I would not buy an amp based on its damping factor, it is essentially meaningless in ...