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Ok..thanks for your comments..sounds like the general consensus is that you get a sense of the noise-floor by listening to music. So the noise from tube when no music is played is not part of the equation?
Wayner,I think we are in violent agreement. A dynamic system can overcome a fairly high noise floor, but lowering it makes it even more dynamic. My point was to simply (bad word) say that lowering the noise floor can increase all the above, without having to change speakers, etc. The OP wanted a definition and/or understanding/concurrence of "noise floor" and we've pretty much exhausted the options of what it means if it's low vs high. So many folks think that their system ought to sound dynamic and produce black backgrounds just because their speakers don't hiss or gurgle at rest. It's only one ingredient of the total noise floor, the "at rest" noise. Heck, even cables and power cords can highly affect the floor, yet they typically don't exhibit any "at rest" noise per se.