Typical manufacturer's marketing hypes! It is not possible to comment because one would have to make all sorts of assumptions, such as what I am doing below:
Assumptions:
- the 29A peak current is the peak value of the sine wave, that is, not peak as for maximum rms current.
- and it is not peak to peak, just peak.
In that case, 29A peak = 29/square root 2 = 20.5A
To deliver 20.5A into 4 ohms, the voltage will be 20.5X4 = 82 V rms
I don't believe the rail voltage is as high as 82 Vrms.
So it is not possible to project in terms of "watts". We would have to know the maximum voltage the amp can output and at what load impedance that 29A peak is based on, as well as the phase angle because:
Watts = Voltage X Current X Cosine (phase angle), or Current X Current X the resistance of the impedance based on the following power formula:
Power = VI Cos(ø), ø is the phase angle, or
Power = I^2 R, R is the resistance part of the impedance.
I think it is more important to know the voltage and current. Too bad everyone talks about "watts", when it really isn't as useful for loudspeaker loads.
Very interesting point, but It depends on what the poster knew at the time. If it was Amir, okay he's an EE and is knowledgeable in audio electronics so I would take his words for it. Otherwise it could be just hearsay, or stated by someone who may or may not fully understand the effects of phase angles. One thing I do know is that phase angle is part of the characteristics of the impedance, but if the absolute value |Z| is 8 ohms at a certain frequency, then it is 8 ohms regardless of the phase angle at that same frequency point.
Note: impedance has two components mathematically speaking, and can be represented as a complex number, with a real term and the imaginary term:
Z = R + jX, where R is the resistance, and X is the reactance (inductive, capacitive, or both).
for details, check out hyperphysics website:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/electric/imped.html
The issue concerning phase angle is heat dissipation in the amp, the higher the phase angle typically means the higher the heat the amplifier output stage has to dissipate. How to figure out the equivalency even in that narrow sense is complicated. I don't know how to do it, without spend hours on text books and audio amplifier handbooks. Even then, it still depends on the particular design of the amplifier, some may be less prone to the phase angle effects than others.
I would agree in general sense, but if the AHB2 can do it, then a strong AVR such as the RX-A3080, AVR-X8500H, SR8012, and some of the older Onkyo/Integra/NAD flagship or near flagship AVR should be able to do it, in term of output power. Example: the Onkyo TX-SR805 measured (by S&V) 327.6 W @0.1% THD+N, that's 1 kHz, but the AHB2 measured under the same condition will not come close at all. My Denon AVR did 298 W, not far behind the Onkyo, and @0.0021% THD+N at 167 W (knee point).
Don't get me wrong, I would of course take the AHB2 over any AVR, just that I feel AVR, some anyway, deserves a touch more respect.......