D
Donohue
Enthusiast
Depends on ohw the Nad is rated... Denon measures their WPC with 2 channels driven. If NAD measures their receivers with all channels driven, it would be the more powerful of the two.
I see you beat me to the punch on this one... I wasn't sure how NAD rated their power specs, but considering their reputation, I thought this might be the case.bumblebee said:that's 50 wpc, full bandwidth, all channels driven into 8/4 ohms. i don't think the denon is rated the same way.
warpdrive said:Listen dude. I explained why there is a difference between NAD and the Denon. The difference between NAD's 50W and Denon's 75W is that the NAD was rated with a real world loads.
warpdrive said:Huh??? What real world load??? Please explain further
And can do much better if asked to.
Like how?? That dynamic output???
Don't be so presumptuous and shortsighted. How do you know how many watts he needs anyway? You know, one day, maybe he's going to upgrade to something nice like a Totem Dreamcatcher system which dips down below 4 ohms.
And that NAD will drive it properly??? Or, whimper on its shortcomings??
Then all the dynamic headroom is going to be useful. That Denon would choke and die whereas the NAD would still deliver a powerful punch.
Speculation.
The fact is, the NAD will deliver its rated power into complex loads,
Huh? What complex loads? Greatly inductive? Capacitive? Or speakers that are poorly designed as it dips in impedance so much.
But designing an amp to handle complex loads is a much more difficult task requiring a design that provide higher current using beefier components kke larger transformers, output transistors.
What makes a load complex?? Greatly varying impedance loads??
My bet is the the NAD would sound cleaner and play at lower distortion levels with real world music.
Uhm, you would loose big time.
Take two cars.
Why would I want to use a car analogy. Not in the same universe, let alone the same hobby.
Take out your earplugs and actually try *listening* to the components for a change instead of gazing at the spec sheet.
Actually, I listen to music, not components. You should try it![]()
bumblebee said:take it easy dudei/we just described how NAD is different from the Denon. and fact is, it is more powerful
as for sounding better, some people find the NAD to be more musical. but that is subjective and is not true for everybody.
Of course the NAD can sound as powerful delivering 50 watts, as would the other componet will. And???av_phile said:You've got nothing to worry. I share your experience. Don't take this dude seriously. He's got nothing to contribute to your listening pleasures. The NAD can sound as powerful as another brand touting a higher power rating on the same load with the same -10db volume setting. Listening with your ears is all you need to enjoy in this hobby. Not everyone is as blessed.
1989...wow, I'm sure all receivers are still using the same amplifier designs from then too, so the article must still hold water…wait it never did…articles from stereofool generally have bits and pieces of facts interspersed with their opinion and speculation in order to make a case for whatever it is they’re writing about. This article is no different: some truth, sprinkled with incoherent rambling and half thoughts.spider_duggan said:http://stereophile.com/asweseeit/489/
"If there is one fundamental amplifier specification that ought to give an unambiguous correlation with what is heard, it is its power rating. An amplifier rated at 100W should, naturally, go louder (by 3dB, for all you techno-buffs) than one capable of pumping 50W into the same load. Yet at CES, NAD put on a convincing demonstration that their 50W FTC-rated 7100 receiver would swing more clipping-free volts into a typical load (represented by a B&W loudspeaker) than even a 90W competing product. The implication was that the 50W NAD product would go louder without distortion than another amplifier officially rated as being almost twice as powerful."
I don't know much about audio and electronics, instead I'll let this article speak for itself
regards,
If you compare two well designed (accepted proper design) amplifiers and you do not exceed the amplifier's specifications you will not be able to distinguish between the two in a double bind test (the sound quality would be the same). But Mr. Atkinson ignores this fact and goes on to expel more of the drivel and idea's that stereophool hold so near and dear."Test We Must," cried High Fidelity's erstwhile editor, Michael Riggs, in a January 1989 leader article condemning the growth of subjective testing. (See the sidebar for Peter Mitchell's obituary of HF magazine, now effectively merged with Stereo Review.) With the exception of loudspeakers, where it is still necessary to listen, he wrote, "laboratory testing (properly done) can tell us pretty much everything we need to know about the performance of a typical piece of electronics...We know what the important characteristics are, how to measure them, and how to interpret the results."
With respect to Mr. Riggs who, all things aside, is still a man who apparently believes that magazines should contain leaders and is therefore a cut above the run-of-the-mill editor, this last statement is ridiculous. Ridiculous. I defy anyone to look at a comprehensive set of CD player or amplifier specifications and correctly predict its sound quality.
This is just dead wrong...ISO has been the standard for film for quite some time...but what does this have to do with power ratings....nothingOf course, I should have known better. I had only to look at the fact that linear, and therefore distorted, ASA film-speed ratings had never been supplanted by the altogether more sensible logarithmic ISO or DIN figures to realize that being right doesn't make a case irresistible.
Yes...more subjectiveness defiantly moving in the right direction here...ah no!The point to note, however, is that, putting aside their commercial motivation, NAD has proposed a primary power rating that ties in with the subjective loudness of different amplifiers.
Yeah, subjectively better if you like the sound of distortion...That way, you might be able to get a handle on why an amplifier with 1% of second-harmonic-only distortion, a typical classic tube design, for example, is objectively worse but subjectively better than a solid-state model with 0.1% of components ranging from the 7th to the 17th harmonics.
bumblebee said:mtrycrafts,
have you actually tried amps other than denon, yamaha, onkyo or pioneer? and didn't i said finding a gear to be musical is subjective? what's w/ you?
if it sounds good to you, who's to contest that? you might be thinking of high fidelity instead.mtrycrafts said:So, then, musical has no real meaning, undefined?
Is a double blind test subjective? I'm not sure how it counldn't be... If so, you're comments are conflicting. You suggest that the stereophools should use a double blind subjective test and then critizise them for suggesting that power ratings be subjective.nibhaz said:From you article @ http://stereophile.com/asweseeit/489/
If you compare two well designed (accepted proper design) amplifiers and you do not exceed the amplifier's specifications you will not be able to distinguish between the two in a double bind test (the sound quality would be the same). But Mr. Atkinson ignores this fact and goes on to expel more of the drivel and idea's that stereophool hold so near and dear.
Yes...more subjectiveness defiantly moving in the right direction here...ah no!
Double blind test are not subjective...spider_duggan said:Is a double blind test subjective? I'm not sure how it counldn't be... If so, you're comments are conflicting. You suggest that the stereophools should use a double blind subjective test and then critizise them for suggesting that power ratings be subjective.
Other then that, thanks for the info and I'll research your comments further![]()