this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
22 points (92.3% liked)
BudgetAudiophile
945 readers
1 users here now
A place for AUDIO enthusiast to share, discuss and listen to others people setups
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
How many watts a speaker need has nothing to do with how loud it is, you realize that, right?
Speakers don’t need their maximum RMS power. You’ll go deaf if you’re pushing 100w to these on the regular in a living room.
100w (or 150) is just the power rating that the manufacturer assures that the voice coils can safely handle without burning up after hours of use.
Even inefficient rocks masquerading as speakers will likely be uncomfortable to listen to for longer than 10 or 15 minutes at 100w.
Absolutely true and only because an amplifier is able to output 100W per channel, does not mean you have to put it in full volume. Higher output means better electronic components are used, also means I don’t have to use the amplifier in max power constantly
I never said anything about listening constantly in full volume. Efficiency, size, frequency, so many things matter. A small 1W speaker can easily reach 90dB if needed, just as a comparison.
When it comes to electronics, it is often the same with mechanics. There are inefficient and efficient areas. You can drive you car in the first gear to 30km/h at 8000RPM or you can use the third gear at 2000RPM. The result is the same, but since one is more efficient, you have less issues with e.g. heat which ages electronics a lot. So I‘d rather go with a 100W per channel amplifier and have proper components to run the speakers constantly at 20-30W instead your recommendation of going with 20W per channel and then wonder why audio sounds shit. You do you.