As I understand it, the goal of power scaling is to reduce amp power down to 1/100 watts to provide heavy distortion in the PA section at low sound pressure levels.
I think power scaling could be flawed for two reasons: poor dynamic range and poor speaker performance.
I don't know what the noise floor is on the typical amp, but the dynamic range is the difference between the maximum output power the amp produces when it is amplifying a guitar signal and the amount of output power the amp produces when it is amplifying internal noise noise.
Reducing the output power brings the guitar signal closer to the noise floor and reduces dynamic range in the process.
From what I can tell, most guitar speakers stop perfoming well when power drops below about 1 watts or so.
I think power scaling could be flawed for two reasons: poor dynamic range and poor speaker performance.
I don't know what the noise floor is on the typical amp, but the dynamic range is the difference between the maximum output power the amp produces when it is amplifying a guitar signal and the amount of output power the amp produces when it is amplifying internal noise noise.
Reducing the output power brings the guitar signal closer to the noise floor and reduces dynamic range in the process.
From what I can tell, most guitar speakers stop perfoming well when power drops below about 1 watts or so.
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