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82 Cornwalls

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Posts posted by 82 Cornwalls

  1. @Idontknow

     

    I don't know if I will be able to explain what I mean to you and how our views apparently differ because I'm not going to spend a lot of time on it... edit: okay maybe more than I meant to considering how long this post is. :-)

     

    Yes I know there are a number of people like your video guy, but for everyone like him there are others that try different things for knowledge and understanding realizing they are usually making sideways moves or even going a step or two back occasionally.

     

    Speaking for myself I don't have to go to others (video reviews or forums etc) to ask what will work for this or that and will I like it because I have enough experience I know what works for me.

     

    The majority of my purchases have been used and get sold for not much if any loss. The money saved if I were still using my first system would have been spent on something equally nonessential. ;-)

     

    Another forum has quite a few members that bought a system in (insert decade here) when they were young and still use it having never tried much if anything else, more power to them but I have enjoyed a journey of exploration that has been very satisfying and I was very happy with all but a few purchases over the years.

     

    Always looking for better was very rarely the basis for something new/different.

     

    I know a lot of folks that have done the same with no regrets.

    • Like 2
  2. 20 hours ago, ebaer said:

    But, like I said originally, I am not an audiophile, but I can tell the difference, I just don't want to invest the amount needed to get to that level.

     

    Your post sounds like audiophile talk to me.

     

    Smart audiophiles get excellent equipment they can afford, it can be hard to enjoy top of the line everything when up to your eyeballs in debt.

  3. 1 hour ago, Mogues said:

    How do you pop the caps out? I'm totally lost here. My 600Ms are beautiful...but they came with absolutely no instructions and it seems impossible to "pop the end off" to expose the openings for banana plug insertion.

     

    When I encounter them in amplifiers I use a drywall screw or similar to twist into the Euro safety plugs and pull them out.

  4. 59 minutes ago, S391 said:

     

    I'm glad I found this thread... I just bought a pair of HII's but I just assumed they were 8 ohm (I know, rookie mistake) and it turns out they are 4 ohm... time to change where I have them connected to my tube amp....

     

    With tube amplifiers always try both.

    • Like 3
  5. 4 hours ago, CWelsh said:

    Yeah...what about that? Man, we need some audio engineers who can speak plain English to chime in.

     

    I feel like I'm reasonably intelligent and I think I understand some of this stuff, but I have to admit that I've never had that AHA moment where it all clicks into place and I can say, "if I do X I will get Y result". But, maybe that kind of clarity is just beyond me. Heck, I still think it radio is absolute magic, let alone television across the airwaves. 🤫

     

     

     

    A lot of people just call most everything synergy.

     

    I think most of the time (80 - 90% just to throw a guesstimate out) if you know what to look for and can find comprehensive measurements, like Stereophile does, what works together and what doesn't can be explained, but it takes time, lots of research/investigation, and experimentation with different kit/trying things together to get a better understanding.

     

    Say you have x amount of money to spend on an amplifier and you find 2 at your price, a 50 watt amplifier and a 100 watt amplifier. Which one do you buy? The 100 watt one of course because more power is always better. What if the 100 watt amplifier was made for spec games and barely meets its specs on a test bench using 8 ohm resistors and the 50 watt amplifier was built for real world conditions by guys that know speakers aren't just an 8 ohm resistor and it can drive difficult loads without breaking a sweat?

  6. 2 hours ago, Gnote said:

    My opinion on your question is extra watts are just like extra horsepower . I don't think they mean anything until you NEED them .

    But when you need them thank God you have them !

     

    And if you don't have what you need the speakers will tell you, if they are not complaining you are probably* fine.

     

    As mentioned above solid state running out of steam is (usually) easier to hear. Low power class A solid state is probably more like tubes in this regard.

     

    *depends on the listener and his listening skills

  7. 1 hour ago, CWelsh said:

    That 99 dB is LOUD by pretty much any standard...loud enough to damage your ears with extended exposure. So, let's say there is a peak in the source material that needs to be twice as loud. That means the amp has to deliver a whopping 2 watts to the speaker. Twice as loud again, 4 watts. Twice as loud again, 8 watts. Now we have to worry about clipping, but we are at 111 dB. And, unless I'm mistaken, an amplifier that can deliver 100 watts will still only deliver 8 watts to achieve that 111 dB.

     

    Your numbers are off if using "twice as loud".

    1W to 2W is a 3 dB increase and 2W to 4W, 4 to 8, 8 to 16, and so on 3 dBs each time you double a noticeable difference.

    So if actually using 1W AVERAGE I would want 8W - 16W for 9 - 12 dBs above average (after a year or two I would need 500W minimum to compensate for hearing loss).

     

    1W to 10W to 100W to 1,000W is actually what it takes to be twice as loud (10 dBs).

    These numbers show how ridiculous it can get chasing wattage.

     

    Didn't someone say something about needing a good 5W amplifier or is that just one of those stories?

    Of course today a good 5W amplifier can be 20W or 50W or 100W or........

  8. If the amplifier gets the job done with a little to spare and sounds better to the user.....

     

    I use less than 1/10 of a watt average with CW 1s in the living room and less than 1/2 of a watt in my more nearfield system in my spare bedroom with 90 dB speakers. 

     

    Yes I have heard music played at high levels on a great system and like a couple of things about it (not for long though), but overall I enjoy music so much more at lower levels.

    • Like 2
  9. Unused power is just that, unused, no magic pixie dust in it.

     

    I can say without hesitation 8 watts is plenty of power for me and clipping is not a problem.

    Much more power has been tried and found not to be needed at my less than live concert listening levels.

     

    More power to you if that's your desire, but I'm not going to tell someone else they need more power and that it's going to transform their system. If they are happy with what they have and hear no signs of clipping all is good, no sense in losing sleep.

     

    Many have gone down in quantity and up in quality and experienced worthwhile improvements.

    • Like 4
  10. 2 hours ago, John Chi-town said:

    You will notice a fuller sound, deeper bass, superior clarity, and dynamics you have never heard before. Out goes thin, bright sound when you have a good, solid, high-end amplifier that delivers high current and high power. It has nothing to do with loudness; it has to do with superior control and power reserve, like cruising at 80 miles on a highway with a V12 engine versus a 4-cylinder car.
     

     

    Sounds like the OP is only going 40 and at that speed no difference.

     

    What if you had a V24 doing 80, is that better than a V12?

    • Like 1
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