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George,I feel terrible now. By using you as an example, I was only trying to illustrate a set of characteristics of a buyer who would be effected in a particular way. You're very gracious to say that it was fine to use you as an example, and I honestly hope that nothing I said was taken the wrong way.Certainly, I never wanted to question your motives for auditioning the gear, or the sincerity of your interest, and I'm certain that the D-200's would sound wonderful in either of your systems. I hop ...
>I'm not sure why 10% of $2300 vs 10% of $2475 was relevant at all. The pricing scheme is designed to offer different pricing arrangements that would appeal to different people.Those are not different pricing schemes if considered in light of the restocking fee. That's why it's relevant: It's an unfunctional complexity.
Now, I understand you...think the larger problem is another group of potential, but not so serious buyers. We also disagree on that point.
Dusty:How much voltage can the D-200s handle at their inputs?? Many tube pre-amps output 20V or more which can seriously overload the input pair of transistors of most solid-state amps, whether the power amp is turned on or off.
D-200 has an input sensitivity of 2v for the rated output of 200w into 8 ohms, which would be very low on the volume pot of the preamp. Overdriving it while playing music would simply cause the amp to clip.Extreme overdriving could cause the input stage to fail.
Dusty, doe's this mean that a preamp with much less than 20V output would give more headroom. Thanks.