@kjasonl hear hearš¤š¾
Best amplification for Magico S3 newer version on your experience
I purchased a pair of S3 but now I am facing that I might not have the funds for top brands amplification that I see them pairing at shows CH, Solution, D'agostino
Etc.
I come over here looking for advice.
Currently using Luxman 509x. My room is 18x12 and I listen to low to moderate vol.
Thank you in advance.
Showing 2 responses by kofibaffour
@mountainsong like Jason said, you don't need to fret over spending a gazillion as competent, incredible endgame can be attained for reasonable cost.
Your speakers are an 87.0dB@2.83V/1m sensitive set. Magicoās nominal 4ohm rating is realised in a sub-5ohm trend from 53Hz-1.7kHz, and a minimum of 2.85ohm at 75Hz and less than 2.5ohm above 18kHz. The impedance load is toughest in the deep bass where a big swing in phase angle of ā66° at 48Hz precipitates a minimum EPDR of 1.09ohm at 62Hz.
So you need an amp rated for low impedance loads: Ideally stable into 2 ohms, and even better if rated for 1 ohm or less, to comfortably handle the 1.09 ohm EPDR. * Capable of high current delivery: The amplifier must have a robust power supply and output stage to instantaneously deliver the required current (around 3.74 A peak) into the complex and often very low equivalent impedance. * High Power Reserve: While 40W peak power is calculated for 100dB, an amplifier with a significantly higher power rating (e.g., 100W, 150W, or more into 4 ohms) would provide the necessary headroom to handle the challenging load conditions presented by the low EPDR and large phase angles without clipping or exhibiting dynamic compression.
Your Luxman is rated for 120W into 8 Ohm and 220W into 4 Ohm.
With dynamic peaks of 183W, 342W and 507W into 8, 4 and 2ohm
Hell it does 278W into 1 ohm.
TLDR, your amplifier is already competent and top of the line for your speakers. So unless I'm you listen at egregious SPLs, no need to spend
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