Question, why do some amps double power from...


8 to 4 ohms and others don't?

Is it because their power supply rails are not quite high enough in voltage? Is it because they don't have enough reserve storage in their caps? Are there some other factors I have missed.

Thanks,
Ronb
starsandseas

Showing 2 responses by atmasphere

There is little correlation between 'doubling power' and the rules that human ear uses.

There is however a design rule that takes advantage of the concept, and there is another design rule that says that what is really important is making an amplifier that obeys the rules of human hearing to the best of technology's ability. The two rules have been in conflict in the audio world for close to 50 years, since slightly before the advent of the transistor.
Hi Ron, The main thing you want to look at is the idea of constant voltage. For speaker like the Theil, which is a Voltage paradigm device, the amp must also conform to the same paradigm. To do that it *does not* have to double power! The Voltage paradigm relies on negative feedback as part of the platform of the paradigm itself; in this case the negative feedback acts to limit the total output power in such a way that the amplifier, even though it does not double power *at full power* it is nonetheless capable of flat frequency response on the speaker, which is the design goal.

Bottom line: your amp is able to do the job on your speaker.