Hello Meocha,
I think Rapogee has a point. In general one of Wilson's main strong points have been being able to play at louder volumes without strain. Comparatively they don't really start to sing until you play them at a louder volume. Then they start to show their stuff.
Although some amps may be better then others to give you this quality, I don't feel that any amp will make them sound vibrant at a low listening level.
You may want to look at a speaker change, one that is known to have linear dynamics at lower volumes. I would look into one of the Quad stats'. Or if you want to stay with a dynamic speaker IMO an Avalon or Verity would do the trick.
Good luck,
Tom
I think Rapogee has a point. In general one of Wilson's main strong points have been being able to play at louder volumes without strain. Comparatively they don't really start to sing until you play them at a louder volume. Then they start to show their stuff.
Although some amps may be better then others to give you this quality, I don't feel that any amp will make them sound vibrant at a low listening level.
You may want to look at a speaker change, one that is known to have linear dynamics at lower volumes. I would look into one of the Quad stats'. Or if you want to stay with a dynamic speaker IMO an Avalon or Verity would do the trick.
Good luck,
Tom