gene said:
I have BIG power amps in my system b/c my speakers demand them and sound BETTER with them. Not even an $11k Pass Labs amp could properly drive my speakers like the Emotiva Monoblocs especially when listening to Blu-ray audio with no compression. My situation isn't the norm. I am running my speakers full range with ALL LFE routed to them.
If not even an $11k Pass Labs can drive your speakers properly then isn't that a testament to poor loudspeaker engineering? Plenty of speakers do not need $11k of amplification to be driven well. Well, unless you feel price and performance is a linear function, but I don't agree with that.
Modern speakers don't need boatloads of power? Really, which speakers? Have you tested very large speakers that have low impedance demands at bass frequencies? What size room would you make this qualification? at what SPL? Again over generalizing...
Look, I don't think it is unreasonable to assume that typical people a) don't sit very far away from their speakers (more than 5 meters), and don't crave ridiculous SPL (105 dB+) in their homes. I'm not talking about the small subset of people who enjoy trying to recreate a live concert in their rooms, but the everyday, ordinary guy who enjoys listening to music.
You don't need bucket loads of power to handle the kinds of SPL that the average guy enjoys (75-95 dB), and the typical guy probably won't own speakers that have impedance dips down to 1 ohm with weird phase angles. Contrary to popular belief, speakers today don't all require a big stonking power amp in order to sound decent.
Now sure, I'm generalising here, but the above seems reasonable to me. Yes, you may need a bucket load of power to drive your speakers with rerouted LFE, which is not a typical scenario. It is atypical. How many people will not use a subwoofer to handle the LFE? I imagine not many. That's another generalisation, but a reasonable one to expect given the popularity of subwoofers.
If you ask me, most people today use subwoofers for handling LFE and rerouted bass information. Again, another generalisation, but am I wrong?