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Cables?
I think you might be disappointed with only 15 watts driving the Pioneers. I was.
Received my Lepai in the mail yesterday, and the LED lit up, but no sound. Looks like there's a significant number of people on Amazon reviews for the amp that have had to send theirs back due to quality control issues/non-functional units.
A caveat on my post above: I am using the little amplifier to break in some Mark Audio 7.3s. With these high resolution metal cone drivers, the amplifier reveals a more analytic and a harder sound. My first experience with this amplifier was with paper cone speakers. That was a better match.Fred mentioned upgrading the power supply. I have the power supply that he recommended. I like the non-switching power supply better. That does bump the cost. Now, I am wondering what low power and relatively inexpensive amplifiers might be out there that sound killer at 5 watts.
Hmmm... Pioneer SP-BS22-LR 4" Bookshelf Speakers - Black - Pair are not $77 but &122!
The one thing you are forgetting about is speaker efficiency. A speaker like the Pioneer is about 86db/m/w and with a feeble amp, will drive it to clipping in short order, toxifying the power supply, then bleeding DC voltage to the speakers, which is a speaker killer. DC voltage means no cone movement, just current to the voice coil. That makes the coil heat up, expanding the copper, closing the voice coil gap, and then it is possible for the coils to start rubbing where they shouldn't or worse, start on fire.Moral of story is that amps of any wattage need to be mated with speakers that have a useable range of efficiency, so as not to destroy the system, which is the road you are heading down.Wayner
I also connected up a $40 Toshiba DVD player, making it possible to spin 4" polycarbonate disks.