toquemon said:
Av_phile: i don't have anything against you. We live in a free world and anyone can say whatever they want to say, but i think you are really mad because a $500 receiver performs equal or just a little bit inferior to your $10,000 (or more) amps.
The difference is not form hell to heaven.
Talking about receivers, Yamaha states something like this: "110 w/ch continious RMS into 8 Omhs from 20hz to 20,000 hz with no more than 0.04 of total harmonic distorsion" in stereo mode; i think they can't lie to the FTC. If they put it this way is because it performs this way, right?
You're absolutely right. I am mad as hell at those overhype power claims that dupe unwary consumers. Making promises that make comparisons with other gears conservatively rated almost impossible for the uninitiated.
If it says so in stereo mode, fine. On the surface they are not lying, as they are complying with FTC requirements. But tell me what impression do their advertising banners have on unwary consumers? Why do consumers have to know about stereo mode, 1khz, THDs, full bandwidth, when for so many years, audiophiles have been enjoying and taking for granted a level playing field comparing brands that employ the same conservative power measurement?
Rating ALL channels in Multichannel mode didn't exist when those FTC requirements were formulated. So the contemplation was in stereo. But just because the FTC is silent on rating ALL channels in 5 or 9 channels doesn't defeat the SPIRIT of the regulation. It was precisely because so many amp makers were measuring their amp power in only one channel, extracting relatively higher power figures to foist a muscled gear on unknowing consumers, that the FTC put its foot down to ensure that the consumer is not shortchanged when he listens in stereo. Afterall, the contemplation why you made a stereo gear is precisely to listen in stereo, not each channel one at a time.
The same logic applies with multi-channel gears. You make a multichannel gear on the assumption that you will listen with ALL channels driven, not just one or two. It is that same logic why makers like Rotel and NAD and others continue to state ALL channels driven when rating their power. It doesn't matter whether in reality you need all those channels giving out the same power at the same time. It is simply a
conservative minimum rating that can accommodate the possibility, however remote, that you will drive ALL of them at the same time with the same signal - like 5.1 stereo or mono, at high volume levels. Again, let me repeat myself, what's so wrong about making a conservative minimum power rating?
It actually amuses me that many manufaturers fail the preconditioning tests imposed by the FTC: one third of specified power delivering 1Khz continuous tone for an hour. So they have to lower their specs. As they should. I am glad there are regulating entities like the FTC to bring down the hype in those overblown powe specs that cannot deliver as promised. There's really nothing unrealistic about this test. I suppose they've never encountered users who play for hours on end at half the power or more on nearly FULL bandwidth. Like playing rock and disco at almost full power for hours. To think those thumpng bass eat more power than a 1khz test tone.
But ofcourse people here will counter, ordinary consumers don't listen at such levels at home. That's beside the point. The point is about making power specs to make for a level playing field for consumers to make the right choice. A customer who wants and buys a 100wpc 5.1 gear expects to get 100wpc for all his channels. Not just in stereo. Not just at 1khz. He doesn't care or is not aware that he won't need that much with most DVD materials out there. But just in case he wants to play a mono Frank Sinatra or Dean Martin material in 5.1, he will forever wonder why his gear rated only in stereo or at 1khz, doesn't sound as loud as a similarly rated gear playing the same material on all channels but is conservatively rated with ALL channels driven in Full bandwidth. But ofcourse, not everybody listens mono por stereo on 5.1 or even 7.1, so it's OK not to expect 100wpc in multichannel. Fine. But are you hearing yourself? Just because you don't listen that way in reality gives license to manufacturers to trump up their power numbers?