TheOctopus
Banned
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2013
- Messages
- 1,622
Serge you don't even pretend to understand or care , hahaha ..![]()
Im now beginning to understand how such a stalwart company is laughed upon in the modern hi-end era and considered junk by many..
:disbelief:
Regards
Over the decades of reading Stereophile, I've seen plenty of comments of cooking and blazing hot amps that were too hot to touch, etc.. etc. while being bench tested/tortured. What's there to not understand? Music is not a continuous sinewave at 1/3 rated power....
Music flows, it has ebbs, quiet passages, music had my MC501s, D'Agostino Momentums, ARC, amps that actually offered a "visual" reference to what is going on with the power output, they were all cruising at fractional power output. Mostly somewhere in the 3-40w range with peaks of perhaps 100w when really rocking out on occasion. I don't listen to music at simulated rock concert levels... Never have.
So McIntosh has both thermal and clipping protection. No fried tweeters, no melted transistors that were outside the SOA. It is true that McIntosh operates at class A for the first few watts and sounds great doing it but no amount of heat sinks would keep it within that range if the loud knob is cranked over on the preamp... It leaves class A and will keep on huffing and puffing, delivering, typically way more than the advertised power with the autoformer. What's there not to understand? The thermal circuit is there to protect your investment from your own stupidity.
Don't like McIntosh? Fine, that's your personal bias. I see nothing wrong with the design that has never let me down personally and everyone else I know that owns McIntosh amps.