Low Level Listening and Distortion


Would some amps sound better at lower levels due to distortion being produced at a lower sound level than another? In other words, a "clean" sounding amp (think stereotypical class D) sounds better to me at higher volumes while another amp sounds much louder than the class D at higher levels but great at lower levels, which I assume is our ears translating distortion into "louder" in our heads. Is it the job of a preamp to be sure the amp sounds the same at all levels or is this just impossible to make the sound that linear? I have one of the newest GaNFET amps from a well-respected designer/manufacturer playing at the moment and it sounds boring at low levels but good at higher levels. Not surprisingly it also sounds quieter at the same matched volume levels (using white noise) than the tube amps I also have. I hope I explained my question so it can be understood. Thanks.

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Showing 2 responses by mglik

Just now, listening average mid 60s db. Normally mid to high 70s.

Quite engaging making it difficult to write this post. Imaging and soundstage are right on. And, in a way, drawing me into the music more than louder.

Class D GANfet AGD Audions. “Complete” sound with very low, inaudible distortion. Think the lower volume is suited to the current content-C, S & N.

Thanks for this thread. Maybe the lower volume will continue to engage. It is more relaxing.

 

 

I had JBL Century 100 s. Looks like many also had them in the early ‘70s.

Miss those college days and cranking the JBLs!