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What amp(s) are you looking at?
Looking to add a new amp to my system and realizing that I'm going to have to spend extra money to get an amp that will power my 87db speakers the way i want to. If i had more sensitive speakers, like 93 db i could probably get away with an amp about half the price. So my question is why are all speakers not made with higher sensitive drivers. I understand that a larger cabinet is often needed but is there other obvious reasons?
I have a pair of salk SS8's and thinking about a Pass labs something. The used class A options, at the lower wattage, seem more "affordable". thanks for your input
I'm using an XA 30.5 and couldn't be happier. Huge upgrade in sound and power compared to the First Watt M2 it replaced, though on paper their wattage ratings (in class A) are fairly close. Try the lower wattage Pass amp. I think you'll be surprised by how gutsy they are despite their rated power. I think we've been lead to believe that we "need" all this power, but the fact of the matter is most of us with "modest" systems and listening spaces don't. If you have a large listening room and large speakers, then I can understand the "need."
A better question would be, why do nearly all audiophiles still use passive (crossovers downstream of power amplifiers) speaker designs?Do audiophiles somehow feel that they can match amplifiers to drivers better than the manufacturer?Do audiophiles make buying decisions based on cool (expensive) cabinets/designs?Do audiophiles distrust/dismiss the concept (because active studio monitors are biased towards dry/highly accurate versus entertaining sound)?Are manufacturers so segregated into speaker guy/amp guy camps that they can't/won't collaborate?Note that passives use crude crossovers that waste tons of power and mask the load that the amp is trying to react to while actives (one channel of amplification per driver) offer an overall less expensive solution with greatly improved dynamics, flatter frequency response, and unbelievably full/deep bass in relatively small cabinets.With computer audio and wireless technologies becoming so popular its easy to see how an active speaker could be the ideal solution for distributing sound throughout the home.
So far the best and correct answer to the OP.
Do audiophiles somehow feel that they can match amplifiers to drivers better than the manufacturer? no, but speaker designers and amp designers are not thinking about the same issues in their independent efforts and we have to do our best to find gear that mates well. just the nature of the beast (reality)Do audiophiles make buying decisions based on cool (expensive) cabinets/designs? Of course.Are manufacturers so segregated into speaker guy/amp guy camps that they can't/won't collaborate? They have enough work to do to make their product perform at a price point w/o the added delay of working with just one manufacturer with who-knows-what design philosophy/approach.[/quot
So my question is why are all speakers not made with higher sensitive drivers. I understand that a larger cabinet is often needed but is there other obvious reasons?
Do audiophiles somehow feel that they can match amplifiers to drivers better than the manufacturer?
Do audiophiles make buying decisions based on cool (expensive) cabinets/designs?
Do audiophiles distrust/dismiss the concept (because active studio monitors are biased towards dry/highly accurate versus entertaining sound)?
Are manufacturers so segregated into speaker guy/amp guy camps that they can't/won't collaborate?
..... It is awful exasperating to have to unload, locate, and move, and pack a 150 lb. amp that may turn out to be less than satisfying.....