TheoN said:
As another point on this issue, when we did
the Red Dragon amp review, I switched out the two amps (500w into 4 ohms and 1000w into 8 ohms) and you could absolutely tell the difference in the bass between the two amps with the Revel Ultima2 Salons. Level matched between the two models, bass with the 1000w Red Dragon monoblock amp model was incredible—far better dynamics and impacts than with the 500w (which was no slouch)
How did you level match? How was the switching done? Was the testing done sighted? How many trials?
At reasonably loud listening levels, let's say 82 dB, those Ultima Salons will still be drawing
fractions of a watt on average. Unless your room is the size of a gymnasium and you are sitting 7-10 meters back more or less...
Speakers can't generally taste, sense or touch the extra power that an amplifier can potentially supply. The only thing a speaker can sense at any given point in time is the voltage applied across its terminals. Thanks to Ohms Law, no power amp is physically capable of supplying more current than is required at a given voltage.
Thanks to the physical laws of our universe, no power amp, no matter the size, weight or price can supply more current than any other amplifier below its own rated power. You can compare a receiver to McIntosh 2KW (2000 watt) monoblocks, at reasonable SPL levels where the power demands are typically low, the McIntosh ain't going to supply more current than the AVR. No way, no how.
1. If you apply a voltage, the load impedance draws a current up until the limit the amplifier can physically supply
2. If you apply a lower voltage, the load impedance draws a current up until the limit the amplifier can physically supply, albeit at a lower level
So if the volume levels are reasonable, the voltage demands will also be reasonable and the current demands will also be reasonable. So .... how do we go from a 500 watt amplifier sounding pretty good to a 1000 watt amplifier sounding "OMG" at reasonable levels, where the voltage and current demands won't require anything .... anywhere
close to 500 watts?
Here is another piece of the proverbial pie. If the speaker could sound better at 1000 watts rather than at 500 watts, and the speaker could 'see', hence sense, hence detect the extreme voltages applied across its own terminals, then you would be experiencing permanent hearing damage in a matter of
seconds. Not minutes, but seconds.
But we already established that reasonable output is reasonable output, and reasonable probably isn't extreme, because extreme is extreme. I think.
So, although I'm disputing your claim, please don't take this the wrong way, or think I'm purposefully trying to give you a hard time, but I need you to explain how it is physically possible for a speaker, like the Salons, to physically require 500 watts+ at
reasonable levels, so much so, that you exceeded the limits of the 500 watt amp, because the 1000 watt amplifier made it sound so much better.
If you did not experience this difference under reasonable conditions, then I do apologise for my ranting, but I'm trying to wrap my head around a speaker that can respond with better verve, or dynamic impact, or better bass response in conditions that require very low power.
So I'll ask again : How did you level match? How was the switching done? Was the testing done sighted? How many trials?