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Steve, I'm not sure that's big enough..you have no idea how much I needed a good chuckle, I'm currently residing in my local hospital awaiting further testing to find out why my chest feels like it's wrapped in a huge elastic band and both legs are numb from the knee down-the upside is the food is made to order and my room with flat panel tv is nicer than alot of the finer hotels I've stayed in. Free Internet!! I'm not dead so life is good!
I currently use a Virtue TWO.2 amp and love it, it has plenty of power with the 30/130 power supply, about 55 watts a side my Grant Fidelity Tube DAC-09 is used as a pre & DAC and adds a bit of tube flavor to the sound.
Another thing to keep in mind is number of watts you're actually going to use.If your speakers are 90 db efficient and you normally listen at 90 db (quite loud!) then you're only using an average of 1 watt of power. You would only need more than that for peaks. And how much louder would those peaks actually be? For every 3 db of added gain you need double the power; so 93db needs 2 watts, 96db needs 4 watts, 99 db/8 watts, etc. When you consider tube wattage gets exponentially expensive (darned transformers!) it behooves you to not pay for what you probably won't even use. Like I said before, my 40 watt/channel amp has never bottomed out for me. I also have a 90 watt/channel amp and I seriously doubt I have ever used more than 20 of its watts.The argument for high wattage is headroom. But considering added costs of tube wattage (iron, tubes, lowered reliability) I say keep it reasonable; 20-40 watts is plenty!
You're assuming he sits 1 meter away...
Eclein, I also agree you should have some power in reserve. May I recommend a pair of the Audio Research Reference 610T monoblocks with 16 X 6550C output tubes and 600W per channel (@ 16 ohms - not sure what the power output is at 8 ohms) Steve
You're also forgetting that we listen to two speakers, not one. Not that it really matters.