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Andy,If I recall correctly, the damping factor is equal to the input impedance of the loudspeaker divided by the output impedance of the amp. For a nominal 8 ohm load df: 8/.04=200 which is a fine, but not heroic figure. 500 to 1000 would be benchmark, but overkill unless driving some ungodly low impedance loads. Really, with any decent ss amp, this is for the most part a non-issue. The loudspeaker cabling and internal wiring should also be accounted for, hence the recommendation that heavy gau ...
Andy,As I mentioned this is an average to good figure.DF is just another way of experessing the same thing. 10 miliohms would be stellar. But there are considerably more important variables that determine how much current an amp can deliver. For your Maggies, I would want an amp that is happy playing into 4 ohm loads (note some receivers and amps explicitly do not recommend playing into loads under 4 ohms or sometimes 6 ohms. These are to be avoided as you will stress the ou ...
Thanks, John.My amps are quite happy driving down to a 3 ohm load and, to my ears, sound great. However, there has been talk on the Maggie Forum about how Maggie only really sounds her best when driven by a "high-current amp", and I understood low output impedance is one factor of a "high-current" amp. So I was interested to know how my 40 milliohms stacked up.Regards,Andy
Andy,... take a trip to the high end shop of your choice and borrow a loaner for the weeekend or Sunday--whatever their policy permits. ...