0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 11892 times.
I substituted for my Crown XLS 2500 an Emotive XPA-200 (my upstairs center channel amp) for driving maggie 1.7s. Both amps are less than a year old;a $350 class D (Crown) versus a $499 class A/B (Emotiva).
A previous post,'$2000 Power amps to drive Maggies', which I participated in, was stimulating, and contentious, and I'm not attempting to continue that latter element here.However, as a stimulus it led me to experiment. I substituted for my Crown XLS 2500 an Emotive XPA-200 (my upstairs center channel amp) for driving maggie 1.7s. Both amps are less than a year old;a $350 class D (Crown) versus a $499 class A/B (Emotiva). I listened at relatively low level (80 dB) to Bill Evans jazz (Everyone Loves Bill Evans) which I know well, after replacing the Crown with the Emotiva.The Emotiva A/B amp cast a pleasant veil/glow over the music. Nice, perhaps, for background listening.I then put the Crown back.The Crown, by contrast, was far more transparent; it increased detail, such as instrument separation and resolution, and bass articulation especially. It sounded far more 'real', to me (my room, my old ears, etc).What I don't have is a more expensive class A/B amp to experiment with...maybe I'll order one from an online source that allows returns (there were lots of suggestions as to what brand, in the above mentioned post!).The search goes on...
The Crown XLS 2500 is $599 at their homepage. Where do you get it for $350? I think you should add that you listened to the combination of amps and speakers. You have found a good match of amps and speakers, at least to your liking. Other speakers can give a different subjective result. Emotiva's more expensive power amps are very good and highly respected by Swedish audiophiles.
That experiment merely reinforces the importance of power, especially for Maggies. It's not even a fair fight -- 150 wpc vs. 440 wpc. Obviously, a much more expensive, high powered, high current amp will make the Crown frown.
Si Senor. Current as in amps is key to uncolored live Maggie sound or any other planar magnetic design for that matter. Tubed amps will work like big Audio Research but bring plenty money for that. I prefer hybrid class "D" amps personally. charles
There isn't any inherent current superiority between a 150wpc and 440wpc amplifier.....assuming the limits of the 150wpc were not being exceeded with the volume setting......and all other things being equal.The overused "Maggies love current" cliche' is complete nonsense. All speakers "love" current.....Maggies just require a bit more because of their relative inefficiency.Dave.
thoughts on XPA-2
150watts per channel could be easily exceeded on a Maggie at any reasonable SPL level , at 84 db nom and at 3 M listening distance that amp would clip on peaks
I'm not sure how you're calculating that.Most of the Maggies are spec'd at 86db / 1 meter / 2 watts.Moving the distance to 3 meters would require 150 watts?? (75 times the power?)It's probably not quite this much, but let's even assume a -6db SPL drop with distance X2.Dave.
I Think most would be spec'd below , 83.5db ( 3.6R as per stereophile so for simplicity sakes we will ride with this ) so they would require approx 4 watts For 86 db , so yes on dynamic peaks you would /could easily exceed 150 watts and as you had pointed out before , there is also dynamic compression from the limited excursion and of course BL losses due to the peg legged one sided magnet assembly ... So yeah they will require some drive to boogie, one can always verify with a scope ... Regards