@TLS Guy &
@PENG already said it well. Focal Aria 926 speakers do need an external amp to drive them because of their impedance characteristics … low impedance values, the audio frequency range where these low impedances appear, and large shifts in impedance phase angles over that same audio range.
Like TLS Guy & PENG, I couldn't find an impedance curve for the Focal Aria 926. But I'd like to add two independent and reliable review measurements for the similar but larger Focal Aria 936. One is from
SoundStage! and the other is from
Stereophile. They look similar to me, and they resemble the impedance curves the others posted above. Focal may make somewhat hard-to-drive speakers, but so do many other companies. At least the various Focal models share a consistent overall design.
Here's the impedance curve of the Focal Aria 936 from Stereophile. It shows frequency vs. ohms (solid black line) as well as the impedance phase curve of impedance phase, frequency vs. phase in degrees (dotted black line).
View attachment 69149
John Atkinson of Stereophile said this:
I suggest a relatively inexpensive Class D 2-channel amp from
Buckeye Amps. Either one of these:
Hypex NC502MP 2-Channel
Higher power at $695:
- 450 watts @ 2 ohm
- 500 watts @ 4 ohm
- 350 watts @ 8 ohm
- (per channel, 1kHz, 1% THD)
Hypex NC252MP 2-Channel
Somewhat less power, but adequate for your speakers, at $575:
- 180 watts @ 2 ohm
- 250 watts @ 4 ohm
- 150 watts @ 8 ohm
- (per channel, 1kHz, 1% THD)
Ignore any negative comments you may have seen online about the "poor sound quality" of Class D amps. That may have been true 30 or more years ago, but for the last 20-25 years, Class D amps have become state-of-the-art for audio amps. They are more powerful, measure better than any older Class A-B designs, are smaller in size, and cost less. Once the Hypex and Purifi Class D amps became mature products, new designs of older types of amps came to a halt.