No.
Idle dissipation is just a static amount, not related to audio power. I think my best analogy is idle speed on your car engine. My truck idles at about 500rpm. But if I were to goose that up to 700 or 1000 rpm, it would have zero affect on how fast the car can drive or the horsepower it could generate.
I don't want to spark the same tired debate, but there are ways to look at amp power. Ultimately the power rating is a measure of how much audio power it can put into a speaker load. This comes from the power supply fundamentally, but also is influenced by the tubes involved, and the circuit. The debate? Some want to measure power like hifi: how many watts into the load without distortion. My position? What if the amp is distorted all the time? Does it put out zero power? I consider it the amount of energy the amp can put into a speaker. I will let others worry, "they SAY it is a 120 watt amp but it only puts out 96 watts."
Idle dissipation is just a static amount, not related to audio power. I think my best analogy is idle speed on your car engine. My truck idles at about 500rpm. But if I were to goose that up to 700 or 1000 rpm, it would have zero affect on how fast the car can drive or the horsepower it could generate.
I don't want to spark the same tired debate, but there are ways to look at amp power. Ultimately the power rating is a measure of how much audio power it can put into a speaker load. This comes from the power supply fundamentally, but also is influenced by the tubes involved, and the circuit. The debate? Some want to measure power like hifi: how many watts into the load without distortion. My position? What if the amp is distorted all the time? Does it put out zero power? I consider it the amount of energy the amp can put into a speaker. I will let others worry, "they SAY it is a 120 watt amp but it only puts out 96 watts."
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