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I read this article many years ago and it convinced me to invest in high-powered, solid-state amps, and I did so for about 15 years. Today I have an 8-watt tube amp that sounds much more powerful than the 300-watt solid-state monoblocks I've owned. Go figure. Audio has no absolutes.
Yeah, this was Bob Carver's main advertising theme for his magnetic field amplifiers back 30 or 40 years ago.
Need to put this into context. The example given was 90 db speakers (non horn). Stating a 8 watt amp will sound more powerful than a high powered amp is absurd. The 8 watt amp may sound preferable with your chosen speakers. Your speakers are obviously towards the very high efficiency side of the equation. Additionally, tube amp distortion properties are much different than solid state amps. Much easier on the ears. I'm not surprised you prefer tubes with high efficiency speakers. Manny audiophiles do. At the end of day, it's whatever you prefer that counts.
You have your experience. Another has a different experience. You can bet that you're both wrong in one way or another. Just about everything I've learned in audiophilia is there are no absolutely correct ways of doing stereo (or mono). Everything is a set of compromises in how to gain incremental improvement in sound reproduction.
Measurements don't lie. It's not about being correct. Audiophiles are all over the place when it comes to personal preferences. This thread is about the actual physics involved. Since a large percentage of audiophiles have speakers that are 90 db or less, the Sanders white paper is good information for audiophiles to know. The physics behind this are accurate.
You gotta put the measurements into the proper context. Your assumption is that clipping sounds bad at high volumes. If you're correct that a large percentage of audiophiles have speakers that are 90dB and less and they're underpowered, then most audiophiles have no issue with the sound of clipping. In fact, clipping sounds exactly like a lot of live performances!
Tried it both ways: a "low powered" 225w/channel AVA amp and 1200w/channel PS Audio Stellar M1200.A fun experiment but stayed with the AVA amp.An Amp Comparison: PS Audio Stellar M1200 and AVA Vision SET 400https://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=176173.msg1856501#msg1856501
I think there's 2 issues at play here. Whether an amp sounds good (because not all amps sound good), and whether an amp is underpowered for a particular speaker/room/loudness combo. A bad sounding amp will never sound good, no matter how many watts it has. And a lower powered amp can sound good given the right speaker/room matching. I listen to large scale symphonic music a fair bit and Freo is right, if your amp is underpowered then things turn to mush pretty quickly. But, I listen to mainly tube amps and they are all low powered. I've adapted for this by having speakers that are high efficiency (97db) and that have a separately powered bass section. With that combo, I really don't run into power issues unless I go with a VERY low powered amp like a 45 SET (1.5 watts). But a 300b (8 watts) is fine.
8 watts with 97 dB speakers, so @ 40 watts with 90 dB speakers, seems about right.