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I, and others on this forum, find that watt for watt tube amps seem to be louder than ss amps. Engineering types have told me that tubes are able to deliver transient peaks better than transistors and this could be the reason. I personally don't know how or why it seems that way...it just does! So I don't consider 40 watts of ss power as equal to 40 watts of tube power as other members suggest...at least not in practice.
So lets say we play a 1k test tone just so we can set a volume level to test two amp types. We are not looking at sound quality at this point in time, just a test to see if one amp plays "LOUDER" - not a "SEEMS LIKE" it plays louder. Does one play louder or not? If not, it is just marketing BS to make you think you are getting more for your $$$$. Okay: We have our pre amp all set, our source all set, our speakers all set. We then play the tone and get a electrical reading out the back of the amp speaker terminals. Let us start with the SS amp first. We now record our voltage reading, and we might as well record amperage while we are at it. Now we measure the SPL from the speaker at 1 Meter with our SPL meter mounted on a tripod so it to stays in the exact same place. Now it is time to switch to the Tube Amp, and setup everything the same as before. Time to measure: Will there be an increase in SPL's with the Tube Amp in place?Should speakers change SPL levels even when fed the same amount of electrical properties? They shouldn't right? Maybe it is just a preference of the type of sound one is looking for and not really SPL measurements.If this seems all rather absurd, it is. It is all about the sound and not word play....
... Such is the difference between an engineer and a scientist....
If what makes tubes seem louder is actually the delivery of the transients (attacks of notes) then a test tone will show no difference between the two. Same with white noise and an SPL meter. A watt is a watt is a watt. Tubes don't make extra watts out of nothing. However, tubes and ss do sound different (if you disagree with that statement you shouldn't be commenting on this thread at all) and the sonic signatures of tubes (vs. ss) give them a perception of sounding louder than equal ss watts. And if John's reasoning is correct about the softer clipping than you could say that tubes actually do go louder before becoming unbearably clipped.
I'm an engineer and take offense. IMO an engineer artfully applies science.
the first amp I was lusting after was like 8 Watts, an expensive 8 watts and sounds like not enough...
I am seriously considering getting a tube integrated or tube amp and I don't really know how much power I need.My room is like 12 X 16 roughly and my current speakers- JBL 4312A's are rated 91db sensitivity and I listen nearfield at comfortable levels, when other audiofools drop by they usually want to turn up the volume.