0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 33623 times.
Unfair to the store? The HiFi shop by me constantly lends out gear, you have to get on a waiting list!Since most of it is synergy, it’s almost impossible to buy something without trying it out. BTW: this company called http://www.fatwyre.com/ started out selling new and used cables and they lend them to you. Not they also sell components and they lend them too. My amp is 1.8 wpc. I drive a 95db sensitive speaker. I have used my old trusty RatShack sound meter and found that 82db is the normal listening volume to me. High 80’s is kind of loud. Unless you listen to very dynamic music types (orchestra), the wattage needed is very low. Hundreds of watts even for a very inefficient speaker is hard to justify in the real world – maybe on paper but that’s not worth much. Sounds like the Audio shop wants to sell you an amp. My buddy borrowed a MF amp and a Parasound at one point, didn’t like either.
Quote from: Russell Dawkins on 25 Mar 2007, 06:12 amWhat's to stop you going back to the store where they recommended the MF KW 750, borrowing it for a day and finding out for sure if that's the answer? If you like the result you could then start looking for that much power in a solid state amp but cheaper.What you suggest seems quite unfair to the store.Why should they lend out gear to somebody who has no intention of purchasing the gear, but only wants to hear if it is the answer?People should only use the dealer if they might actually purchase what they are auditioning. If you want to hear the gear AND pay below dealer prices, buy it used (here at AC, Audiogon, etc...) so you can try it in your system. This will provide less financial risk and not take advantage of the dealer.George
What's to stop you going back to the store where they recommended the MF KW 750, borrowing it for a day and finding out for sure if that's the answer? If you like the result you could then start looking for that much power in a solid state amp but cheaper.
My room is 20 ft wide by 30 ft long with 8 ft ceiling, pretty large area.
Honestly speaking do you really need that much power to drive your equipment? I was under the impression that 100 up to 300 watts should be sufficient enough for anyones listening needs, especically you like to crank it up from time to time like I do???
If ever you have to fly in challenging circumstances, though - like in the mountains - a big surplus of power at hand is your best friend.
Now that's just common sense - along very good and practical advice.
Most listening is done at less than a watt; it is the transients and range (and listening position) that drive the power requirements.
No, it's not that at all. It's all about speaker efficiency. Then it's about the room size and what listening levels you listen to. Almost every one of your statements is wrong, IMO.......