mep
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2013
- Messages
- 5,095
- Thread Author
- #1
350 watts is about right for most speakers especially the MBL so i dont see this as an issue. I know some audiophiles not sensitive to clipping like running no more than 75 watts on their speakers and may find 350 outrageous ..
Regards
So this was a thinly veiled swipe at me, my Nola KO speakers, and my Ref 75 amp. Someone who has never heard my system let alone being in my room thinks he is judge and jury of how much power my Nola KO speakers need in order to not be constantly clipping. I have reminded this person countless times that my speakers were designed using the Ref 75 as the reference amplifier. Apparently, he knows far more than the Carl M. who designed and voiced the Nola KOs using the Ref 75. The good news is that I do post what gear makes up my system along with pictures of my room so people like A.Wayne can take pot shots at my system and room. It's interesting that the major critic of my system won't dare post what gear he owns or pictures of his room. After numerous repeated attempts to get him to tell us what gear he actually owns, he won't disclose it. The closest thing was a crazy statement that basically said "I got me some of this and I got me some of that." You always have to wonder about people who love to crap on other people's systems and yet refuse to disclose what gear makes up their system. This is what I find outrageous. If you choose to buy or build highly inefficient speakers that require 350 watts of power, more power to you. Literally, because you will need it.
The bottom line is that unless you are sitting in a room with a system that you think is under-powered and you hear constant clipping and the owner is sitting next to you and seems to be oblivious to the clipping, you need to keep your mouth shut instead of saying that someone is not sensitive to clipping when you have no factual evidence to back up your big mouth.