Amps with high voltage?


I just bought a set of speakers that needs an amp that requires a large voltage swing. This speaker drops to 2 ohms in the extreme treble range. So while it draws almost no current , it needs a large voltage swing to drive to its full outputs capabilities. Any suggestions for amps with large voltage swings?
bobheinatz
Why? What seems to be needed is a large current reserve to maintain the correct voltage across that low impedance.

Kal
What speakers do you have?
What price range are you looking at?
Parasound JC-1's would do the trick
or a Nice Lamm M1.1, M1.2, M2.1, M2.2 all can handle 1ohm loads and put out tons of current (regardless of their watt rating)
Innersound also makes some serious amps (up to 1000watts) for your speakers and are posted used quite often.
I used to have the InnerSound Eros Mk-II. The best amps I found to drive them were the Monarchy Audio SE-160 tube/MOSFET monoblocks. They had a warm, musical character, with very lovely treble performance. They blended more seamlessly with the Eros than any other amps I tried.

The InnerSound ESL amp had plenty of power and pop, and the clarity was outstanding, yet it made for a thin and bright sound with the Eros. I would avoid it unless you'll have a lush-sounding tube preamp preceeding it. If you're not using a preamp and are using the InnerSound crossover/amp, then a tube/solid-state hybrid amp makes the most sense in my view (having tried a lot of different combinations myself).

Happy Listening!
Levinson ML2 might be what you are looking for, too; push 400 watts at 0.5 ohm.....
Electrostatic speakers are not driven well by an amplifier that makes constant voltage with respect to load (i.e. most transistor amplifiers). This is because the impedance variation in ESLs is not due to the resonance of the speaker (where the constant voltage concept works fairly well). ESLs tend to sound better with an amplifier that tends to make constant power with respect to load as they will then exhibt flat frequency response.

Amps with contant voltage outputs will tend to sound bright on most ESLs due to the nonlinear increases in power that the amplifier makes as the impedance of the speaker decreases with frequency. Conversly, the amplifier power drops at lower frequencies where the impedance of the speaker is higher, making for bass-shyness.

In general, your best bet is a large tube amp, which is more likely to exhibit constant power if it does not have excessive negative feedback. Innersound speakers are a bit of a special case, as they have very low impedances that make them a difficult load for a tube amplifier.

This is often solved, as long as the power requirements are not too high, by the use of the ZERO. see zeroimpedance.com
Atmasphere,

Thank you for your reply. I am currently using a Brue Moore 70 watt tube amp that sounds very good. However all the imformation that I can find on Innersound suggests a very difficult load to drive so I am wondering if the Eros 3 would sound better with higher power amp. If I change I will look for a more powerful tube amp.
If you like the sound of tubes, for the mids, and highs, but a beast of a solid state on the bottom, there is one amp that will do it all without breaking a sweat on any difficult speaker load, and that is the H2O.
Check out the review here at Agon by audiofankj It's a good place to start.

http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?aamps&1103079446