0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 10970 times.
What about current delivery?A pair of Wyred 4 Sound sx500 monoblocks have 35a of current but put out 250 watts into 8ohms. An Odyssey Khartago monoblock has 120a of current and puts out 110 watts. Should there be a big difference in performance in regards to watt output or does the extra current in the Khartago create a different dynamic?Maybe another way to pose this, is watt output the final say on how an amp handles a speaker or does other factors like current and bandwidth help determine it as well?
A while back I had a chat with a forum member about amps with high watt output vs amps with lesser watts but designed different and still providing excellent bass and slam. Neither one of us understood why an amp that supposedly puts out far less watts could perform just as good if not better than an amp with twice the wattage.I guess I've always been under the impression that more watts the better when it comes to an amp and would often hear the old " there's no replacement for displacement " when asked why. I've had some class d amps over the years with often at least 500 watts per channel and recently have had some Crown XLS 1500 amps bridged putting out 1500 watts per channel. Yet when I inserted a Job 225 stereo amp putting out about 180 watts per channel into 4 ohms I got as good dynamics and very comparable if not better bass and slam. Is it just the difference between class d and class a/b?Does the overall design philosophy of an amp trump high wattage capability? I think this is what I'm trying to ask... Any comments or thoughts is appreciated and any informational links is a plus!Thanks!
Understanding your listening preferences and being open-minded to experimentation / learning is key.
I know there will be lots of hemming and hawing about this, however here it goes.Any amp asked to perform optimally under about 50 hz is doubling even tripling its capability with watts or current delivery. Most amps today in solid state or tube will perform, but not necessarily at levels to satisfy with very difficult speaker loads, low efficiency, or demanding 25 hz bass out of a tower running on passive crossovers. I was always an advocate of simpler the better and for years only wanted "Full range" speakers capable of it all in order to run one good quality amp to meet all the frequency needs. This is difficult, and after years finally went to the darkside. Now I found using passive speakers with above 92 db not demanding subsonic low frequency response you can do very well adding active powered subs, and 9 times out of ten the performance will be better, and even cheaper going this route. Sure tuning such a system is a little trickier, but we are audio nuts so all the time in the world for that!This also opens a huge variety of very good tube or solid state amps providing anything from 10 watts to 100 watts easily surpassing the sound output or quality of being forced into 400 watt mono blocks to run un-efficient monster towers. An example which is sorta extreme is when I had Avantgarde Trios... 20 watts with 1000 watt subwoofers could not be matched or even close vs. Sonus Faber box speakers with 600 watt Mcintosh monos in pure power, and control. The higher efficiency speakers tuned to 50 or 60 hz and up on passive filters adding an active subwoofer will win out every time regardless of wattage, and again likely be using higher quality amplification for even less money in many cases. So the real question here should be "Mo wattage Mo better when you want to run 100% full range main speakers" .By the way in the example above horns running only 90hz and above takes HUGE stress off any amp to sound far more dynamic, silky, tonally musical, and all the other derivative pay offs. Simple electro/mechanical physics. Eliminate the low frequency duties, and any good amp is even better again being less to do with 3db extra here or there due to wattage differences.
This seems to be my experience thus far. More watts doesn't necessarily mean better performance to my ears. Amp "A" may have 5x the watts but amp "B" may have the preferable tone and presentation with dynamics to go with.I guess I was just surprised how well the Job 225 performed on my speakers in comparison to other amps. I wasn't expecting the dual 8" woofers to get the workout they got from the Job.