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Are you confident it is working properly, nothing to be afraid of? No possibility that it can blow those new drivers ?
Had an amp that on occasion went to full output...believe there was dust in the pot meter or something.. Sold it since I couldn't trust it.
pstrisik,Years ago I had a brand new 80's HK integrated, and it went to max volume all on it's own - I about jumped out of my skin. I have owned 4 pieces of HK over the years and 3 of them had problems. I would just hook your speakers up to the amp you are going to listen to them on in the room where they will permanently reside and enjoy the music while you are breaking the speakers in. You will never get that listening time back if you put the speakers in the basement and let them run by themselves on an old worn out 1980's HK.
pstrisik,Every Omega I have had has sounded great right out of the box; the break in period just improved what was already there, and my experience with Omega goes back to the hempcone days. I always had suitable upline gear in front of them, so I never have had any of the thinness of sound that some say they have. If the Omegas don't sound great out of the box, there is something wrong elsewhere in the system, so if you already have good upline gear you can go right at it. If you start listening on an old solid state amp, you may be disappointed, as Omegas are thoroughbreds and require good upline gear, and your Dennis Had amp is surely that. You sound like the break in period is like a trip to the dentist; it doesn't have to be. I will use the reverse of your psychology: first impressions are the strongest, and the HK may mess with your mind.
You misunderstand. I won't have my Omegas for a few more weeks. I'll check out this amp this weekend in my existing system. I have no intention of listening to the Omegas with this amp.