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All the responses are wrong. This is a significantly complicated issue and you need to learn electronics before you understand it. Here's a few out of a hundred things to consider:Most cheap speakers and audiophile speakers don't have Zobel networks, therefore their impedance can vary from 3-16 ohms (or so) in the 20Hz-20,000Hz frequency band. Power(watts)=V(voltage)2(squared)/R(resistance). So what happens to power if a speaker dips to 3 ohms @ 40Hz? What if it dips below 1 ohm? Also, speakers can handle significant peak power. Many times more than 150 watts.And it goes on and on and on...
I didn't think it was the case, buy my main question/concern was that a high power amp was going to put out more power at a given volume level vs. a lower power amp, into the same speakers. Paul
I didn't think it was the case, buy my main question/concern was that a high power amp was going to put out more power at a given volume level vs. a lower power amp, into the same speakers.
Bear in mind that most loudspeakers have multiple drivers. The power generated by the amp is split up (more or less) to be sent to each driver. Each driver has two limits: thermal i.e. how much power can you put into it before it melts, and excursion i.e. how much power can you put into it before it hits some mechanical limit. The other element here is that music is not a constant power but has a very high transient-to-average ratio. You can be well within the thermal power limits of a driver, but still be excursion-limited on peaks.
The speaker manufacturer is saying that 150W is the maximum average power the speaker can take before you reach thermal or mechanical excursion limits for any of the drivers, whether you have a 200W or 2000W amplifier.
I think Nagy's response is right on.If the impedance drops too low and the amp is outputting it's full power (say 150w @ 8ohm) then the amp will try to deliver more power maybe causing distortion and frying the voice coil. Or the amp may double it's power into 4 ohms which may be over the rating of the speaker causing damage.Paul, an amp will provide the power it is rated for. The speaker will not stop the power if you continue to raise the volume. What damages speakers most is distortion when an amp is driven beyond its rated power causing distortion being sent to the voice coil. And yes too much power can burn up a speaker or break a cone as well. When the music gets grainy or distorted it is time to back off on the volume. Or you hear a voice coil bottom out.What are you trying to do? Get louder music?