Owner's Manual

V.
PROTECTING
YOUR
INVESTMENT
A.
For
full,
year-after-year
enjoyment
from
your
speakers,
you
should
respect
their
limits.
They
will
produce
room-filling
volume
in
average-
sized
rooms-and
handle
peak
momentary
levels
at
those
volumes
without
audible
strain.
But
avoid
louder-than-life
playback
of
music
or
movies,
especially
in
large
rooms.
Even
the
most
"bulletproof'
speakers
can
be
damaged
by
excessive
volume
levels,
especially
for
long
periods.
B.
When
listening
to
music
or
movies
at
very
loud
volume,
you
shouldn't
turn
up
bass
or
treble
all
the
way
or
close
thereto.
This
sends
tremendously
increased,
disproportionate
power
into
the
speakers,
and
may
well
damage
them.
Some
loudness
compensation
("Loudness")
controls,
which
boost
both
bass
and
treble,
can
also
be
troublesome
at
high
volume.
They
are
intended
only
for
low-volume
listening.
C.
Finally,
you
should
be
aware
that
when
amplifiers
and
receivers
are
pushed
to
their
limits
to
produce
excessive
volume
levels,
they
are
driven
into
"clipping"
and
can
do
severe
damage-especially
to
tweeters.
Often,
the
damage
is
done
by
underpowered
amplifiers,
which
may
reach
their
limits
very
soon.
When
such
units
begin
to
"clip"
the
audio
waveform,
they
may
generate
high-frequency
"spikes"
of
tremendous
power.
More
tweeters
have
probably
been
destroyed
by
this
phenomenon
than
any
other.
If
using
your
speakers
at
loud
levels,
listen
carefully
for
any
sign
of
harsh,
garbled
midrange
and
diminishing
intelligibility-and
turn
the
volume
down
right
away
if
you
detect
it.
NEVER
TURN
UP
THE
VOLUME
ALL
THE
WAY
TO
SEE
HOW
LOUD
YOUR
SYSTEM
WILL
PLAY!
D.
Recommended
Power
We
recommend
amplifiers
and
receivers
rated
from
a
range
of
20-150
watts
with
our
compact
systems,
20-200
watts
with
our
tower
models.
For
playing
at
consistently
room-filling
volume,
a
minimum
of
50
watts
is
usually
a
good
idea.
As
just
indicated
in
the
paragraph
above,
be
wary
of
driving
low-powered
amplifiers
to
their
limits.
We
recommend
a
maximum
of
80-150
watts
for
sustained
program
material-as,
for
instance,
with
organ
pedal
tones
of
long
duration,
or
minutes-long
subterranean
special
effects
in
movies.
Be
aware
amplifiers
with
equal
power
rating
may
not
play
equally
loud.
Those
with
higher
dynamic
power
ratings,
better
satisfy
the
power
requirements.
Some
have
protective
circuitry
that
curtails
power
available
in
demanding
situations.
8