Thanks for the reply man, good info for me to look into. Just wanted to clarify though, indeed the RMS on the Cerwin vegas LS15s are 400watts. Im thinking you might have mistaken them for the SL15s, the newer model, which have a max wattage of 400.
As for the Paradigms, I was mistaken they have a minimum of 10watts and max of 300 watts, so they only go for what you give them.
I did not mistaken it but I should have mentioned that I did my research of the LS15 (could not find the 15S) and found the claim of 400 W nominal/RMS. Also that's all from 3rd parties not Cerwin Vega's, probably because they did not archived information of such an vintage product.
Anyway it is a moot point because we don't know what manufacturers mean when they use the term "nominal power", my guess is, they probably meant average, not peak or maximum if they are honest. Do you have the Cerwin Vega spec sheet and/or manual?
I considered such numbers meant peak or maximum just want to be on the safe side, so that's an error on my part for not being clear about it. Just a minor point, there is no such thing as RMS power, the correct term is average power, but the incorrect term RMS power has been widely used over the internet, to the point that outside of the electrical engineering world, this technically/mathematically meaningless term seems to have been used more often than the correct term "average power". Again, it is just a minor point, for non EEs, may as well ignore it..., I mention it here just so if you see the term "average power" (some manufacturers do use it correctly) you don't get confused.
The more important point for you to be aware is that even if the speaker is rated 1000 W average, 2000 W peak, it does not mean you have to match it with a 1000 W rated power amplifier because how much power you need is determined by the following:
- How loud do you listen, for example, in a movie cinema, it is loud, if you measure the sound pressure level there you may get 85 dB on average, with peaks up to 105 dB.
- Your seating distance.
- The sensitivity of the speakers.
With those speakers, if you sit say 12 ft from them, and listen to level as loud as that in a cinema watching Jurrrasic park series movies,
you will need less than 30 W, with just one LS15 playing!! Assuming CNET's numbers were correct.
Cerwin-Vega LS-15 Specs - CNET
That's mainly because the LS15's specs were listed as 8 Ohms, 102 dB (I de-rated it by 3 dB for my calculations)
So as I mentioned before, it is highly recommended that you use the calculator to find out your power need, then it will be easy to choose the right AVR that you are planning on acquiring to drive your speakers properly.