mhardy6647
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The "right" way to do it, of course, is to measure the amp's electrical performance into a reactive load that simulates a loudspeaker. It is, of course, not a perfect test (like Camelot*, it's only a model
) but it is controlled and reproducible.
Stereophile has done this for millennia... well, for a long time, at least.
www.stereophile.com
(after Ken Kantor, per @John Atkinson)
A pretty smart dummy load, if you ask me.
________________
* Camelot.
Stereophile has done this for millennia... well, for a long time, at least.

Real-Life Measurements
As mentioned by two readers in this month's "Letters," amplifiers are used to drive loudspeakers but are almost exclusively measured into resistive loads. The reasons for this are twofold: 1) real loudspeakers both produce neighbor-annoying sound levels and tend to break when driven with typical...

(after Ken Kantor, per @John Atkinson)

A pretty smart dummy load, if you ask me.
________________
* Camelot.