Costly learning experiences!
Yeah, tell me about it!
Every time that I blow a tweeter in my front mains, it cost me just over $200 a pop.
And I blew three of them already!
These loudspeakers are recommended to be powered by amps between 50 and 350 watts RMS. They are rated to handle a maximum of 300 watts RMS on instantaneous peaks only, and no amplifier clipping.
And they are rated at a maximum of 150 watts RMS continuous with less than 10% amplifier clipping.
They are rated at 4 ohms impedance (but do drops below that at several frequencies of the audio spectrum).
And they are measured at 84.5db sensitivity.
Anyway, at $200+ a shot, it is very tough to digest, but that is the price I have to pay for that smoothness in the highs. Hard to keep things under control with blockbuster blu-rays and SACDs.
I never use an amp that can at least provides 225+ watts into 4 ohms.
But that's not enough, because when they usually clip at that power and above, that's when the damage is done. Most amps or receivers, when they clip, they usually do with a bang!

And after that, no more sound coming from the tweeter, of course.
My 805 can produce just over 350 watts with two channels driven into 4 ohms at 1% THD, but not too sure what happens at 20khz?
I think that if I wanted to be safe, I would have to trade my speakers (which I don't) to newer ones with some type of diamond tweeter with a magnesium compound from a mixture of plutonium, neptunium and beryllium alloys, cooled by mercury and coated with titanium.

That will probably give me so large a smile that it will crack open and tears my ears apart.

So, that's why I rather blow them before they blow me!
Anyway, life keeps singing as long as there are tweeter's replacements!

But I know that I'm on my short rope now! Supplies are getting very thin, and harder to find.
Bob