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I am considering to sell my original pair of floorstanders, these have the 7" Alnico and are a great speaker. A friend is looking for a new pair of speakers and we wonder if his Cayin 252B should be a good match. I don't know to much about SS amps and what makes a good match with Omega speakers. Is there anybody who wants to give their opinions if it should be good. This a rather powerful amp I believe, not that it is the most important issue, but what is recommended as max input? How much power can the Omegas handle without taking any damage?
You're reading my post like I shall no longer use Omega, that is not the case here. I have a pair of HIgh Output Alnico floorstanders, no plans of selling them!!! So don't worry. It is more a question if my friend will be happy with the Cayin amp he has. ( I even have a pair of monitors with, not standard but still Omega, 8" drivers, though with some glue issues, and was blessed with really good Omega warranty
I don't see any specifications on the maximum power input on the website. There is the notation that they will work with both low and high powered amplifiers, but how high? The highest wattage I've driven them with was a 50 watt Rega Brio-R, but the Cayin is 3 times that ... I would Check with Louis to make sure.
Don't wanna be rude or anything but these responses aren't really helpful Fullrangeman
In general solid state amps excel in sound quality at higher outputs and tubes the opposite (the range we listen to 99% of the time). Solid state typically clips "hard" when overloaded (but with lots of headroom rarely should) while tubes "soft" clip (way easier on drivers if clipping occurs). And in general solid state amps have high damping factors while classic tubes have low damping factors. High damping means tighter bass (towards being constipated) versus tubes that can produce flabby (exaggerated/boomy/loose) bass. Before solid state tube amps purposely had low damping factors to (improperly) compensate for lack of deep bass from high efficiency speakers that were bass weak. Nowadays we're used to tight bass due to popularity of solid state and tastes moving away from deep and flabby forms of bass response. With single driver speakers this is rarely a factor due to their typical lack of deep bass.Its hard to get a straight answer regarding Omega due to lack of specifications (power handling/maximum output being a long time peeve of mine), and the per ponderous of fanboys here. I own 8 inch Alnico floorstanders (not Omega) that use a single Fostex F200A driver (F3=30 Hz, 89 dB/w/m, 8 ohm, rated to handle 27 watts continuous/80 watts peak, $575 each before being discontinued). I've heard that Omega uses Fostex derived drivers (another well kept secret), so recommend using that information as a guide.