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The obvious answers which come first to mind are the XA.5 and XA.8 series amplifiers from Pass Labs, and Clayton amps. MSB's big monoblocks appear to be fully class A.One brand I have not seen mentioned in this thread is Vitus; they make some glorious sounding amplifiers, both pure class A models and higher power class AB models.If one is really concerned with power consumption, my advice would be to either get some efficient speakers and go with something low power like a Pass XA 30.8, or, go to the other extreme, and end up with a well implemented Ncore class D amp. With good system matching, a well massaged Ncore amp can sound very, very good.
Hello,It is obvious that you need a device that is well constructed. A beefy power supply and you need high efficiency speakers. In this link you can read about some test( that is if you can read French) The man who did write is rather famous in France.The test were done with hhigh effiency drivers but still he states that you will need an amp of about 30 to 50 watts capable of delivering enough headroom. Joni Mitchell and an acoustic guitar will do with a 300b single ended but if you listen to Duke Ellingtons big band you need more. Your device that runs out of power will function as a compressor. Happy reading, Edwardhttp://www.petoindominique.fr/php/puissance.php
Wasn't it Jim Salk that showed how transients were clipping a lower powered amp and when matched with a bigger amp, consumption soared to 300w during intense passages?That and I hear a clear difference between using the 75w from my receiver and my 360w Rotel amps. Even though my line arrays are around 99db/1w efficient. Any explanation for this would be great.
1. How loud do you listen peak and average?2. How far are you from your speakers3. What is your speaker efficiency and type (point or line source)4. Does you speaker have any severe peaks or dips in the impedance curve.
While I generally agree that higher sensitivity speakers are the way to go (and most speakers today are reasonably high sensitivity) there are some wonderful speaker designs out there that just don't come alive without more power than 30-50 watts without audible compression.
I'd also add 5. How large is your listening room?
RD, I have experienced what I believe you are expressing, however, what is wonderful about a speaker that compresses at low levels? How loud is it going to get at 30-50 watts? What is going to happen to your ears? What is causing the speaker to do this?I love Electrostats because they are lively at low levels and I can enjoy dynamic music without the fatigue of high levels. Perhaps you are saying what I believe to be true: Some speakers have to be played loud to hear all the music because at low levels they do not play the details of the music well. I call this property "sticktion". When one electron goes through a voice coil does it create enough force to get past the "stuckness" of the mechanics of a cone speaker? However if one electron goes on the stator of a Electrostat it indeed alters the force on the diaphragm and the diaphragm is much more free to move than the rubber surround and treated cloth of the surround. Another analogy is static vs sliding friction. If you want to push anything there is a certain force it takes to get it started ( to overcome the static friction) once it is moving the sliding friction is less so less force is required. Perhaps this applies to cone speakers, more to some than others.
You might find this thread interesting.
Thank you for that link. Readers should see that the majority of poll responses is below 2 volts. THe only thing I dont like about this test is it doesnt use music. How do we compare a single frequency to music?Come-on guys, Get out those meters and measure your MUSIC, Hey Music is our reference here at Music Reference
Hello,Just take a closer look at the link thjat i did post and you will see that this electric engineer did use music to explain his theory. A pity for you it is in French. You can try to read between the lines and look at the scope pics. Greetings, Edward
Actually, Google can translate the link to English (and other languages).I tried using the calculator, but don't understand what is meant by "critical distance." I admit that I haven't carefully read everything. A number has to be typed in the blank for critical distance or the calculator won't provide a result. Is the critical distance, essentially the maximum listening distance to consider? Layman's terms, please. It's Saturday.