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From what I've seen the majority of Solid State amps will give a double the power rating from 8 ohms to 4 ohms to 2 ohms.Frank told me that Tube amps have the same output regardless of the ohm load.It seems to me that I read somewhere on some circle that there are SS amps with the same output on all ohm loads. I can't remember what this is a result of. Can some of you more knowledgeable folks elaborate on this?ThanksJames
I'm starting research for my first dedicated room. I have nothing right now but a 9x11 1/2 empty room.... I listen....never more than moderately loud, and rarely even that....John
I googled decibel chart and compared several sites. Most examples are too vague for precise work but illustrative examples include: Quiet bedroom at night, 30 db; Conversational speech, 1 m distance, 60 db; Kerbside of busy road, 5 m distance, 80 db & Chainsaw, 1 m distance, 110 db./mp
A full orchestra can also hit a sound level of 110 dB and more, and then play a quiet passage at 20-30 dB. To reproduce this faithfully requires a recorded sound source capable of covering this 80+ dB dynamic range. (Everest quotes one researcher who claims a 118 dB range is required). A vinyl record is good for about 50-70 dB; a standard compact disc with 16-bit encoding can cover a 96 dB range, and the 24-bit DVD disk format a 144 dB range - in theory. Real D/A converters tend to be noise limited to a somewhat lower range.