Dear Chris and James;
Thank you for your responses. Now my measurements make sense. The numbers have important implications. The 804S is rated at 200W unclipped. If transients are 10-20 dB higher than average, that would suggest, taking the more conservative 10dB rating, that unclipped reproduction requires 9x200 Watts = 1800 Watts. That implies that my 14B ST is likely to clip before I even come close to the 200W unclipped program of the 804s. They say you can never have too much power and this certainly proves it. To do it the other way, for unclipped signal, the average power usage, with 10dB head-room for dynamics, would be 600Watts / 9= 66 Watts! If at 12 O'clock I'm at 10% voltage, that would 10% x (SQRT(600Watts x 8 ohms)) = 7 Vmean or 6 Watts. At 1:00, double voltage and quadruple power, it would be 24 Watts, at 2:00 it would be 100 Watts. This would be past the 66Watts + appropriate head room for transients (taking the 10 dB conservative increase for transients). According to these calculations, anything past 2:00 clock would put the Amp into clipping range -- way before my 200 Watt speakers give up. Now, if you want full head room for proper representation of transients using 20dB rating, that translates to (20dB = 100-fold power increase) 600 Watts / 100 = 6W! That is the power at 10%Vmax, which is accomplished at 12:00 clock. So for my amp/speaker combination, going past the 12:00 clock my lead to compression of transients and unfaithful reproduction of dynamic music. This is very important information, and it shows that to fully utilize my current speakers, I have a long way to go in terms of power (somewhat surprising that the 600 wpc amp would clip before the speakers would). That means 28BSST(2) before I even think of the 500W B&W802Ds, which theoretically could never achieve their full potential with any available Amp design!
Alright, this was a very valuable exercise.
Again, let me thank you both for taking the time to respond with hard numbers to crunch. I appreciate it vey much -- another reason to love Bryston.
Best regards,
Shafie