One More Question - Newbie


I read about amps and how I shouldn't go by watts. If you look online and in magazines, some 45wpc amps are going for $2000+. I have also read that the higher the wattage, the louder you can go without degrading the sound/ruining the speakers. What's the correct answer?

Yesterday, I listened to the new version of my existing integrated, which is 11 years old. It is the same wpc. They were driving different speakers, but the sound on that 75 wpc sounded a heck of a lot louder than my 75wpc. Does this make sense?
blewis1041

Showing 1 response by elevick

You need to look at the db rating of a speaker. A speaker that is rated at 89db (decibles) will take twice as much power as a speaker rated at 92db to sound just as loud. You will find that some 3 watt amps with the right speaker will sound louder than some 100 watt amps with a much less efficient speaker.
ie
85db @ 1 watt This is a fairly inefficient speaker
88db@ 2 watts
91db@ 4 watts
94db@ 8 watts
97db@ 16 watts
100db@ 32 watts
103db@ 64 watts and so on
For every 10db increase, you will get a perceived doubling of volume. For that reason, when comparing a 40 watt amp to a 50 watt amp, you shouldn't be able to hear a volume difference.
In light of the decible ratings above, a 7 watt 300B tube amp running a pair of 102db speakers can put out close to 110db!
Final note: Most solid state amps will double output power if impedance goes from 8 ohms to 4 ohms. Most tube amps will now double the output power. If you are looking at receivers, many home theater receivers are not even able to run 5/7 4ohm speakers. The impedance is too low.