As for your assertion that my 125w/ch amps did not in fact sound strained, I'm not convinced.
Please re-read the section you quoted. For reference, here it is, with a different emphasis:
"Unless you heard "don't hurt me" type noises emanating from the amps themselves (it happens - try, for instance, a loud 5-200Hz swept sine on an 82dB/W/m subwoofer powered by a Dayton 240W plate amp) the amps did not in fact sound strained.
The loudspeakers did."
Note I never wrote you didn't hear strain. Any reasonable interpretation of my above statement is in fact the opposite: an acknowledgement that you heard something sound strained. I just wrote that you misapplied where it was coming from. (Unless you were actually talking about noises physically coming from the amp, in which case you would have been correct in your attribution.)
Now, could a higher-powered amp have less to less audible strain from the loudspeakers? Yes. However, the sound would still be coming from the loudspeakers and not the amp. Words matter.
I would argue that if I use a more power amp and it sounds better at a higher average and peak listening level, the only likely explanation is that the greater headroom of the higher powered amp results in lower distortion.
There are plenty of other explanations, but yes, that is one reasonable one.
I've also come to the conclusion, DS-21, that you're just an inverse audiophile, so to speak. You make all sorts of assertions about what doesn't matter in audio systems, while audiophiles just make all sorts of assertions about what does matter. [Big Grin]
If your "inverse audiophile" is "music lover," then that is correct.
However, I've made plenty of comments (albeit not
assertions because I actually have and post support for the comments I make - again, words matter) about what does matter.
For example, constant midrange directivity and multiple subwoofers used expressly to smooth out the frequency response in the room's modal region: any system without those two traits is by definition low fidelity, because those two characteristics are necessary - not
sufficient, but
necessary, because, again, words matter - for high-fidelity music reproduction in a small room. ("Small room" is for these purposes a term of art defined more-or-less as "something one would find in a domestic dwelling," to contrast with a "large" room such as an auditorium or concert hall designed to support an orchestra.)
***power levels have a good chance of actually making a difference in loud listening levels in large rooms.
I don't disagree, though as a general matter if one's listening levels require high power, and one desires album-length listening sessions or longer, one should move to higher efficiency loudspeakers. Then one will realize less thermal compression at loud levels, and lower energy costs at all listening levels.
As to actual levels required, I'm curious, have you done the
test on the diyaudio forum to determine how much power you actually use? (FWIW, my comments on the limits of the test are
here)
The results are quite illuminating. It did change the way I thought about amplifier power a bit. Prior to doing the test, I was very considering dropping 4 grand on a Powersoft Q4004, a rather special 4-channel amp: only 1RU high, yet capable of providing 600W to each of my mains at their nominal 8Ω impedance and 1kW to my high-mounted sub at its 4Ω nominal impedance. And yes, it's certified as safe by an OHSA-approved lab!
But after actually doing the math I realized the only reason I'd want that amp would just be to have a cool, high-tech multi-kilowatt Italian superamp powering my mains. Sonically, it wouldn't give me anything that the built-in amps in the Anthem receiver can't give me. So instead I kept two grand for other things and gave two grand to charity. Obviously, under few circumstances would it be sonically different from two Crown XLS2500's (450W/8Ω, 750W/4Ω I think) which would also be a lot cheaper. But the Powersoft is marginally if insignificantly more powerful, and takes up 1/4 the vertical space.