What is the low-down on matching pre-amp to power amp? Which is high-sensitivity? How much wiggle room is there between pre-out voltage and said sensitivity? (.1v is ok, but .6v over/.7v under (or vice versa depending on which of the above points is correct)?) Or phrased differently, at which points over or under powered should I expect to potentially start clipping my signals from the pre-amp or to the speakers?
First of all, let's make sure you are not confused between the terms "pre-out" voltage and "sensitivity".
Input sensitivity of a power amplifier in V (volts): This is the voltage at the input that will cause the amplifier to reach full rated power.
Use your XPA-3 as example, if the specified sensitivity is 1.5 V, 8 ohm load for full power, that means is you apply 1.5 V at its input, you will get 300 W output into an 8 ohm resistive load.
Fact check: I check their numbers with my spreadsheet (calculations) and found that Emotiva's specs of :
- Input Sensitivity (for rated power; 8 Ohm load): 1.5 V.
- Gain: 29 dB.
is not quite correct but one might consider it close enough. To be more accurate, either the sensitivity needs to be about 1.7 V, or the sensitivity has to be about 32.66 dB.
Note: If you want to do the calculations yourself, the formula are in
@Steve81's article that HD linked in post#2. Steve is one of the best technical writer I have ever known (electronically). If he wrote it, then I know he researched the topic he wrote about so the contents would be trustworthy to read. This is important because there are many inaccurate/incorrect information on the internet.
Pre-out in V of an AVR, AVP or preamp: This is the voltage available at the AVR, integrated amps, or AVP (pre processors) pre-out terminals to drive external amplifiers. Most people have a good idea what they mean, but no one knows their exact meaning because there appear to be no consistency for this particular spec. Yamaha, D&M, Onkyo, Parasound all seem to specified them differently, such as just the voltage, or with additional vague details.
Examples:
D&M.................................1.2 V (what the heck, rms peak, for rated output, we have to guess/assume)
Rotel.................................1.2 V
Bryston.............................8.0 V RMS with DSP, 10 V RMS Bypass
McIntosh..........................2.5 V, Maximum 6.0 V, 6.5 V for the top MX160
NAD.................................. >4 V for top model, not provided for the lower model T 758
Yamaha...........................1.0 V/470 ohms, Maximum 2.0 V or more (more? give me a break
)
Yamaha CX-A5200..........2.0 V/470 ohms, Maximum 4.0 V
Yamaha CX-A5100..........2.0 V/470 ohms, Maximum 4.25 V or more (0.06% THD) - I like this one better
Anthem............................4.2 V RMS, Maximum, <0.1% THD (This is much better, but <0.1% THD, come on..)
Onkyo...............................1.0 V/320 ohms
Based on many measurements I made and articles I read, I would not worry too much about this as long as you stick with the popular brand's upper middle range AVR, AVP or preamps.
Regarding your questions on whether a sensitivity specs is high or low, that's really relative. 0.775 relative to 1.4 is of course
HIGH, and vice versa. We are talking about input sensitivity of an amplifier, so the lower the number, the higher the sensitivity, or gain. In other words, a lower number actually means a higher gain, therefore the amplifier is more sensitive to the input voltage.
Matching: If you mean making sue a preamp has high enough voltage to drive a power amp to its rated output with adquate headroom, then I believe the question has been answered already, at least in a generic sense. If you have the specific models in mind, then we can narrow things down for you.
Next question..