What actually determines volume power? Is it watts?


I have a Yamaha AS-3200 amp. It sounds beautiful and has a really good open sound. The problem is I like my music loud since I live alone and typically I have the volume 70% and with some recordings it is not high enough. I need a amp that has more power/volume.

The AS-3200 is 200 watts at 8 ohms. I see many amps, even much more expensive ones (like the Yamaha M-5000), are also at around 200 watts per a channel at 8 ohms. I am going by 8 ohms for my speakers and also the worse case scenarios. Does this mean if I had a more expensive class AB amp like the M-5000 I would still be listening at 70% volume and getting the same power/loudness? If not, then what actually determines the volume power if not watts?

dman777

To double the perceived volume you need 10x the power.

However, not all speakers have equal efficiencies, and you may not want it louder but you want more bass.  Depends on what exactly you want to accomplish.

You may be better off looking for speakers with higher rated sensitivities than you currently have, or to add a subwoofer. 

Also, if you are turning it up for detail that's often a sign your room is too reflective. 

I don’t want to switch speakers... I want to keep the speakers I have and to be able to listen to the music at 30-50% volume and still have plenty of power on reserver if I want to go louder. With the Yamaha, my normal listening level is at 70% and if I go any higher then you can tell it is underpowered. Does this mean if I bought a stereo class AB amp at like $25k and it is 200 watts on 8 ohms it will also not have enough volume?

Are you running out of power and hearing harshness and compression, or are you concerned about rotating the volume control to 80 or 90% of it's travel? 

Post removed 

@dman777

A preamp / source with more gain might help alleviate the perception you have described. But it’s hard to narrow it down without knowing what else is in your system besides that Yamaha amp.

 

 

With the Yamaha, my normal listening level is at 70% and if I go any higher then you can tell it is underpowered.

Starts clipping?

If that's the case, I would think that more gain would just make it start clipping at a lower volume knob setting.

OP:

I'm saying that you'll only get 3dB louder, which is very little, by going to 200 Watts vs. 100 Watts. 

If you are really constrained in your dynamic range due to power, you are going to need more than that big of a jump to get to happy.

@erik_squires , could OP's issues also be due to (referring to a thread/question that I started last night) his amp not having enough current to maintain the wpc it is rated/listed as putting out?

@erik_squires

+1 …..

(1) it’s important to highlight the logarithmic relationship in adding more volume (db) with the the added amp watts required by themselves - in isolation specs - to get the volume increase.

A 100W amp is only twice as loud as a 10W amp. And a 1000W amp is twice as loud as 100W. This might put the cost of high wattage amps into some perspective.

The size, quality, quantity and impedance of a speaker has a huge effect on the volume of an amp. First off, if you match the impedance of an amp with that of the speaker, the amp is able to deliver its full power. Mismatching to a lesser degree won’t sound as loud dynamic as hoped, and perceived as disappointing.

(2) Speakers matter too in terms of your expected volume increase boost.

(A) For example, your speakers may are rated at about XX dB. You may be faced with a more expensive speaker to boost volume upwards to XX + 3db. . That’s double the volume step.

(B) Other speaker choice variables include the speaker projection and dispersion. The more speakers or bigger speakers you have, the more air they’re pushing and the louder it is. But if you’re on an open stage or a large listening room, they won’t sound as loud as they do if you’re in a small, enclosed room. The reverberation helps to redirect the sound waves back at you rather than disperse into open air.

(3) The wildcard of additional amp “ headroom” to provide a clean audio output, especially if you are cranking up the volume .

So, what is amplifier headroom? Amplifier headroom is the amount of power that an amplifier is able to generate before it starts overdriving. Overdriving means adding gain to the signal, natural gain coming from either the preamp, or the power amp section, or both. In other words, amplifier headroom is just how loud and clear can an amplifier performance be heard naturally.

Relying on the speaker manufacturer’s estimate of power handling is pretty much useless marketing bafflegab and maybe even grossly misleading as incomplete information. The fact that a speaker can possibly handle 300 watts doesn’t mean it’s ever going to see that much power. In fact, most amplifier power spent driving speakers under musical conditions is typically below 50 watts, with an average of around half that.

Where peak power gets big is on low frequencies and large transients. Which is why equipment manufacturers once attempted to rate amplifiers with Musical Power rather than their RMS power.

. When music demands power the last thing you want is to run out, or even get close to the system’s limitations. On those short event peaks and crescendos, we hope for unfettered performance whose sonic qualities match those of softer passages. Unfortunately, this is a rare achievement because of too little headroom. Hint: it gets worse the louder you crank it if the headroom is modest or limited.

Amp Headroom is the necessity for reproducing effortless music.

Headroom maintains an amplifier (or speaker’s) linear performance region—an area we hope to keep proper. Once we exceed an instrument’s linear region, its sweet spot, sound changes and not for the better. The closer we get to a device’s limits the less free and open the music will sound.

Here’s a good way to calculate this. Most amplifiers and speakers are comfortable at about 20% of their rated OEM marketing specs published output. Exceed that and you are a risky venture into areas of strain, struggle, and compression.

TAKEAWAY; amp Headroom matters big-time when music matters,,,and volume heads whims are tested.

@dman777 

It would be helpful if you disclosed brand+model speakers so that we can get an idea of power needed.

Also, seems your mistaken, the Yamaha AS-3200 amp is only 100/150wpc 8/4ohms as per Stereophile and retailer Crutchfield, which is on the low side (including current) for average sensitivity speakers.

As others have stated the OP needs to tell us his entire signal chain and he also needs to use an SPL to tell us what his preferred listening level is.

Look for an SPL (sound pressure level) meter app for your smart phone.  Maybe someone here can give you a specific name to find.  Ideally, you want one that can be set to give you average values as well as peaks.

Max speaker output is limited by a number of factors, but as a rule of thumb speaker sensitivity +20-23 dB is about the practical limit. So, a KEF LS-50 is about 84dB sensitivity  and is capable of peak output put of 104dB at 1M distance which requires a 100W amp. A JBL 4367 with 94dB sensitivity is good for 117dB with 200W driving.

A 3dB increase in sound pressure level requires doubling the power, adding more lower is in general and expensive and  ineffective way to make your system go louder. You also need to know the room impacts.

Add 3 dB for a stereo pair, and subtract 6dB for every doubling of the 1M reference distance. The size of the room, and it's acoustics are obviously key as well, but without specific knowledge of the room dimensions and RT60 it's impossible to calculate their impact, other than to say room gain is a function of acoustical spatial loading, and most domestic rooms behave somewhere between half-space and quarter space loads depending on size, speaker location, and frequency. Above 1000Hz, most speakers behave like half-space loads, below 200-300 hz, quarter-space loads. That's all a function of the wavelength of a given frequency. Very low frequencies  can't even be made in most rooms, rather they rely on direct pressuring and depressurizing the room.

 

Unless your speakers are up to the job, they may not get much louder no matter how much power you use.

@immatthewj Really depends on zooming in on what the OP is hearing when he feels he's run out of juice. 

Generally speaking, a current constrained amplifier produces a flat output into an easy load but at difficult loads the frequency response starts to track the speaker's impedance curve somewhat. 

So with an ESL, an amp will lose output in the treble.  Roger Sanders of Sanders Speakers rightfully points out you need an amp with not just current, but high frequency current drive, which his Magtech amps provide.  With a speaker with a normally bad bass output like several Focals, the amp will sound soft in the mid-bass, where the speaker dips to or below 3 Ohms. 

Agree that we need to know the speaker.  In addition to amplifier power, speakers for the consumer market may start to compress early on.  That is, the power output is no longer proportional to input due to physical limitations of the device, including thermal.

If you double the power, and go from 1 W to 2W you should see +3 DB across all frequencies, but most speakers quickly start to compress, and produce less than 3dB gain per doubling of power. 

If you are at home, and 100W is not enough, you should evaluate the amp+speakers and even the room before making a fix, but jumping in amplifier size is not likely your answer.

Just as a matter of curiosity...,

My Yamaha RX-Z9’s menu allows each input a separate, "trim" volume control so that you can match the apparent volumes from the different sources without resorting to the primary volume knob each time you change the input source.

I’m assuming that your Yamaha would have similar (maybe a bad assumption), but if it does, have you tried to turn up the volume here so that you don’t end up at 70% of the main volume knob setting?

I’ve definitely found that some albums stream louder than others.  I really hate playlists for that reason. Two songs play at a good level and then the next song comes out blasting so loud it makes your ears bleed. Than the next tune is quiet so you turn the volume up.

Cl a ss d amps like d sonic pascal ant vtv ncore can put > 2000 watts into 4 ohms and sound much better that previous versions.there around 2k$.a fosi audio mono with 48 volt gan power supply from fosi is about 200$ and puts out 300 watts mono block. Most have 30 day trial. Power or watts is energy times amps that's the equasion.class d amps are light 80% efficient due to design. Marantz mcintosh denon ect are now all making class d amps. Might be worth a try for you.does your yamaha have a pre out if so use it as your pre amp.enjoy the musicand the search.

I have run into the same issue with my set-up.  I have a Parasound A21 amp that is rated at 250 watts at 8 ohms and 400 watts at 4 ohms.  My speakers are Martin Logan 60 XL, rated at 4 ohms and 92 sensitivity — so should be easily handled by my amp,  But I seem to run out of steam too at the higher volume levels.  On Reddit, a guy told me that amperage is more important than watts when it comes to volume.  He looked up stats for my amp and said his smaller amp had higher amperage and that is why he never ran out of volume on his rig.  I don’t know about these things, but I just assumed that a high wattage amp would be equipped to drive high sensitivity speakers to anything I could want.  

I have run into the same issue with my set-up.  I have a Parasound A21 amp that is rated at 250 watts at 8 ohms and 400 watts at 4 ohms.  My speakers are Martin Logan 60 XL, rated at 4 ohms and 92 sensitivity — so should be easily handled by my amp,  But I seem to run out of steam too at the higher volume levels.  On Reddit, a guy told me that amperage is more important than watts when it comes to volume.  He looked up stats for my amp and said his smaller amp had higher amperage and that is why he never ran out of volume on his rig.  I don’t know about these things, but I just assumed that a high wattage amp would be equipped to drive high sensitivity speakers to anything I could want.  

Here's an opposite story.  I have an old Krell stereo amplifier, pure class A, the KSA80.  It is rated at a mere 80-Watts per channel into an 8-Ohm load.  It is a big beast, I struggle to pick it up, and it has been rated as one of the 10 most influential amplifier designs of all time.

But it is also rated at 160-Watts per channel into 4-Ohms, and 320-Watts into 2-Ohms.  Each time the load halves its impedance, the amp delivers twice the current, and Watts is current times voltage drop.

I now use it with KEF Reference 1 speakers.  These have a sensitivity of 85-dB for a 2.83V signal at 1-metre distance, so quite low efficiency.  Nominally 4-Ohm speakers, they drop to 3.2-Ohms.  I have NEVER hit my personal volume limit and I play music loud.

Pushing the lowest bass out to a powered subwoofer obviously relieves the main amp.  I have a class D subwoofer rated at 1250-Watts RMS, or 3000-Watts peak power.  It has an input level selector and I run it on level 3 out of 60.

When looking at amplifier specifications, they tell almost none of the real story.  Look at the amount of distortion they claim at the rated power. Is the rated power with just one channel driven? How much does it drop when another channel is driven?  Droop here tells you the power supply cannot keep up.

Is the power given into 8-Ohms, or maybe 6 or 4-Ohms?  If it is for 4-Ohms, expect it to be only half that at 8-Ohms!  Does the power double each time the load impedance halves?

Almost all speakers have nasty dips in their impedance in crossover regions.  There is no such thing as a speaker that is 8-Ohms right through its frequency range.

If your speakers don't play loud enough, you could try sitting closer ... and I could keep banging on, but I won't.

My guess is that this amplifier is thinning out at high volumes and can’t keep up with the demands of the music and the speakers. A high current amp of the same wattage would probably sound fuller at high volumes and might scratch the itch. I would look for a 150-200 watt minimum amp that doubles its wattage from 8 to 4 ohms, and is stable into 2 ohms. Coda, Pass, Krell etc.

As long as you aren’t straining or clipping the amp, it makes no difference where the volume knob ends up. As a matter of fact, you want to be using the least amount of attenuation for best sonics.

Many people conflate gain and power. You could buy a different amp with even less power that gets you to the same volume level at 50% of the range. If you can get to the level you want with your current amp by using most of the 30% of the volume control you have left, you don’t need a different amp.

 

You are worrying about something that shouldn’t be worried about.

Knowing the speakers will likely make this thread more informative, and thus more enjoyable (for me anyway).

No system logged in profile.

First and foremost, it would be helpful to know if the OP has ever undergone an audiometry evaluation and what the results were.

My Carver amp 1.5t and Acoustic Research AR-9 play very loud . You don't realize how loud until you try to talk to someone else in the room

 In what is becoming too common around here, the OP seems to have disappeared...