Tube Amps, Magnapans and Impedance


I have tubed monoblocks running in class A with the output transformers rated at 8 ohms. They are driving Magnapan 3.7s which are rated at 4 ohms. Before I bought them I called Magnapan to get the frequency curve for their speakers. The engineer advised me that they are nominally rated at 4 ohms, the lowest load they present at their lowest frequency, but the frequency curve was essentially flat at 6-8 ohms throughout the audible range. The curve he faxed was satisfactory and I have been running them this way since new.

The reason for this thread is: A friend brought over his friend for a visit and listen. When the subject of tubes and planars arose and the impedance ’mismatch’ was discussed, he stated I was missing out by not having a 4 ohm amp. I tried to alleviate his concern with the above to no avail. I stipulated that it is good electrical practice to match the load to the amp but in my case a 6-8 ohm load across the band with tubed monoblock running in class A at 8 ohms was not significantly audible if at all to justify altering the transformers. I just didn’t bother after listening.

My question to my fellow audiophiles, particularly those who have tubed amps running at 8 ohms into loads between 6-8 ohms - Magnapans being the best - what are your thoughts on the subject?

In my experience it would take a speaker with a 4 ohm rating in the midrange where the music lives to really affect the performance with an anemic amp. Anemic bass and washed out mids are sure signs of an amp struggling with its load - which I do not have. My Magnapans sing from the very bottom of their range to the top. The human voice is especially seductive.

I think he had a case of ’wish I had a system like this’ blues. I think there is a term for that. Thoughts are appreciated.
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For those who like the Maggie/tube amp combination but can’t or don’t want to spring for a high-powered amp, there is an alternative. Is everyone aware of the fact that Maggies are not the only planar-magnetic loudspeakers on the market?

Bruce Thigpen of Eminent Technology---already well-known for his linear-tracking air-bearing tonearm---found much to like in the Magnepan design, but saw a way to improve upon it: create a p-m driver that operated in push-pull fashion. All the early Magneplanar drivers were single-ended---magnets on only one side of the mylar diaphragm (if you don’t understand why that is a design flaw and weakness, a little research will reward you with the answer). Thigpen created a push-pull m-p driver over forty years ago, patented it, and uses it today unchanged in his LFT-8b loudspeaker. While he was at it, he made the driver an 11 ohm load, much more appropriate for tube amps than are the 4 ohm (and down) Maggies.

Used with a single stereo power amp, the LFT-8b’s p-m midrange driver and ribbon tweeter are combined with the 8" sealed-enclosure dynamic woofer (for 180Hz down), resulting in an 8 ohm load. But the LFT-8b is fitted with two sets of binding posts: one for the woofer, one for the planar panels, so bi-amping the LFT-8b is a breeze and allows one to use a ss amp on the woofer, a tube on the panels.

Magnepan eventually moved to push-pull operation in some of the drivers in their higher-priced models, but retained the 4 ohm impedance. There are some LFT-8b owners who bought them as replacements for their MG3.7’s, overall preferring the ET. $2499/pr shipped or from an ET dealer.

I myself am a long-time Maggie lover, having bought my first pair---the Tympani T-I---in 1972, and am a current owner of a pair of Tympani T-IVa, the ultimate realization of the 3-panel Tympani design (assuming you ignore the MG30 ;-). I very much like the ET LFT-8b, and find it to work quite well with a modestly-powered (100w/ch)---though unusually-well designed and built---tube amp in a moderately-sized room (14.25' x 22')

Frogman knows of what he speaks. The Maggie's need for ridiculous power is a way overblown item that keeps being repeated. The high end dealer here demos 3.7s with a Rogue Cronus Magnum. I run 1.6s with the same amp. Even after having used an amp that pumps over 300 watts, there is nothing missing with the "low" powered amp.

 

PS...looks like the "not a robot" deal just got even more annoying.

My monoblocks are 80 watts. They do have Peter Dahl transformers which make a huge difference. They deliver the goods and the Maggies seem to like them as far as I can tell. One thing of note is I tend not to listen at super high levels. They are so articulate, musical and transparent, I don’t find the need for high power to get into the essence of the music. That, in fact, was their allure when I first heard them way back when.

When I was amp shopping for my 3.7i I was considering McIntosh with autoformers but was told by the manufacturer themself that autoformers did not work well with Maggie's. As long as your amp puts out high amperage you will be fine, it matters more than watts.

I ended up going with a Pass 250.8 which really makes Maggie's sing.

If you enjoy your sound stay with it and enjoy the music 🎶.


That might be true but Magnepan will not share much information so many have found the answers on their own.

I guess that explains why there is SO much nonsense online about them.