87 is loud on this system but trust me nothing anybody couldn't handle. All channel stereo is really the best setting for listening to music hands down on this setup here and come on man I didn't get on these forums to be asked to turn the stereo down. In fact I wouldn't be here at all if that was my prerogative.
I just checked and it actually goes to 96 but that doesn't matter all that much unless that's the reference volume scale you were talking about I guess.
I'm just thinking about my next home audio set up and wondering how one purchases something knowing it will get to the volume they'd like. I'm not joking this this wasn't going to run anyone out of the room at the volume I was listening to, but there must be a reason the speakers couldn't handle it.
My questions are, by the specs have I done anything wrong in matching this amplifier to these speakers?
If I were to have purchased a larger amplifier would I have been able to reach higher volumes without taxing the speakers as much?
Could these speakers handle more wattage, and was my turning an underpowered amplifier way up the culprit?
Again thanks for the responses I'm a novice and need some guidance before buying another setup.
A max wattage rating on a speaker is a vague thing, usually just means a melting point more than sounding good if fed that much power, then there are continuous/program ratings vs peak ratings. Speakers have limits, some have higher limits than others. Also just because your amp has a given wattage rating at a given THD % doesn't mean your amp can't exceed that and get into higher output at higher distortion with a big enough twist of the volume dial, and more easily with a higher level signal than a lower one.
You really can't match just with wattage in any case, and the specs you listed are vague to an extent for both the speaker and avr. Best to consider the impedance of the speakers, the capability of the amp for such, as well as the sensitivity of the speakers and how loud you'll be listening. Take the 170 watts per channel spec you pasted above, here's the detailed spec from your avr's manual:
- Rated Output Power (FTC) (North American) With 8 ohm loads, both channels driven, from 20-20,000 Hz; rated 80 watts per channel minimum RMS power, with no more than 0.08% total harmonic distortion from 250 milliwatts to rated output.
- Maximum Effective Output Power170 W at 6 ohms, 1 kHz, 1 ch driven of 10% THD
- Dynamic Power (*)* IEC60268-Short-term maximum output power160 W (3 Ω, Front)125 W (4 Ω, Front)85 W (8 Ω, Front)THD+N (Total Harmonic Distortion+Noise)0.08% (20 Hz - 20,000 Hz, half power)
Might like this article on amplifier power needs and some of the linked articles from there
https://www.audioholics.com/loudspeaker-design/truth-about-matching-amplifier-power