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Overall, high wattage doesn't guarantee sonic bliss.
"how many watts is actually used for the average listening session".
I agree- it's always quality before quantity. For the sake of discussion, I am assuming the amps being brought up all produce quality wattage. How many watts is actually used in a typical listening session: I have measured this a few times. With 92db speakers, around 2-5 watts RMS. My VSA VR2's @ around 85db efficiency require 5-10 watts. Both rooms are about the same size. If music is played down low, it's no more than 1-2 watts for either speaker. I have a receiver (JVC RX-999VBK) that has a very good watt meter installed. What caught my eye was the peak power produced during 5-10 watt listening sessions. It ramped up to nearly 30 watts at times! Peaks last a very short time- milliseconds. Listening at 10-20 watts would bring on peaks in the 80 watt range. The receiver is rated for 110 watts RMS per channel and has upgraded output transistors. ===============================From Wikipedia:"The term "Music Power" has been used in relation to both amplifiers and loudspeakers with some validity. When live music is recorded without amplitude compression or limiting, the resulting signal contains brief peaks of very much higher amplitude (20 dB or more) than the mean, and since power is proportional to the square of signal voltage their reproduction would require an amplifier capable of providing brief peaks of power around a hundred times greater than the average level. Thus the ideal 100-watt audio system would need to be capable of handling brief peaks of 10,000 watts in order to avoid clipping (see Programme levels). Entire article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_power
Hey folks- Don't forget the first question: Have you found any correlation between wattage and sonic performance?
Geting back to the gist of your initial question, Roy Gregory started investigating the ability of an amp to project "authority" per a given output. He used 3 conrad johnson amps of increasing capability and found that even at the same listening level (well within the performance envelope of the smallest amp (75 watts IIRC)) the more powerful amp projected with more authority, provided greater soundstage presentation, and just had more "there". I always wondered if there was a frequency component to this "authority". Would a 500w bass amp tied to a flea amp project the same? How much power is needed above middle C to match the projection of a larger amp? PS: Yeah, I know room size, levels, sensitivities, absorption all come into play. For discussion, consider all other factors to the equal.
At some point every speaker reaches its maximum output where it cannot generate any more sound pressure. What's the point in pushing it with more power beyond that point?