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There is no difference between "Tube Watts" and solid state or class D watts. They are all the same. How they distort, how they compress and how much headroom either amp is designed with will make a difference.
Am I right in thinking that a passage in a song that has alot of low end drives the ohm load say from 8 down to 4 because its harder to reproduce those freqs??If so, then I am officially smarter now then 10 minutes ago... or not...
Sorry this ''tube Watts'', I mean say tube Watts in real life driving a speaker, not in a tone test senoid scope.As is said by many tube custumers, one tube watt have the efficiency of two or more transistor watts, when driving a speaker with music.Regards, Gustavo>Never go to a psychiatrist, adopt a cat or dog from the street. On the streets pets live only two years average.
You really don't know what you are talking about.
It all depends on the design of the amplifier, not the devices used.
Regarding watts - If I read your post right, you like your 55 SS watts. If that's the case, I suspect just about 55 tube watts is what you would want.
You really don't know what you are talking about. There are plenty of solid state amplifiers with massively overbuilt power supplies that also play louder than their power ratings suggest. Again, it's all about reserve power, and headroom.Give a listen to a pair of old Mark Levinson ML-2 monoblocks. Rated 25 wpc and will play louder than any 50 watt tube amp. It all depends on the design of the amplifier, not the devices used.