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GoldenEar T66 Manuel Du Propriétaire page 6

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T66 Owner's Manual
Preventing Speaker Damage
GoldenEar T66 speakers are efficient and can be driven to loud listening levels with moderate amplifier power.
They are also able to handle the output of very powerful amplifiers. To prevent damage to your speakers, please
read the following guidelines before hooking them up.
Amplifier Distortion — #1 Threat to your New Speakers!
Amplifier distortion is the principal cause of speaker damage. When listening at loud levels your amplifier may run
out of clean power. It will then begin to produce speaker-damaging distorted power. This will damage any brand
of speaker very quickly! More powerful amplifiers are actually safer — For example: A 40 Watt/channel amplifier
will have substantial distortion above 40 Watts. If driven to 50 watts, this amplifier will deliver speaker-damaging
distorted power! But a 100 Watt/channel amplifier will have very low distortion below 100 watts. Therefore, when
the speaker requires 50 Watts, this more powerful amplifier will deliver clean power and speaker damage is less
likely to occur. (See your GoldenEar dealer for amplifier recommendations.)
Volume Setting
Do not be fooled by the Volume setting of your receiver/preamplifier. It only adjusts listening level — it is not a
"power-output" dial. The amount of amplifier power actually used at a given Volume setting depends solely on
the nature of the source material you are listening to (at a given Volume setting a quiet section of music will use
less amplifier power than a loud section). With typical material, the rated output power of many receivers/
amplifiers is often reached when the Volume is set to around -10dB, or between the "11" and "1 o'clock"
settings with an analog control (with bass/ treble and loudness controls not used — otherwise rated power may
be reached at even lower Volume settings). Remember, all amplifiers produce distortion when operated beyond
their rated output power. The resulting distortion will damage all speakers! If you listen at loud levels, be careful to
listen for the point of audible distortion — if the speakers begin to sound distressed, turn the Volume down or your
speakers and/or amplifier(s) will be damaged! This type of damage constitutes abuse and is not covered by the
warranty. If louder volumes are desired, consider a more powerful amplifier.
There is Actually a Limit!
Even with these safer, more powerful amplifiers, there is a point at which you could have more power than
the speaker can handle. At that point you will overpower the speaker and damage it. At loud levels do not
increase bass/treble controls from zero and ensure that all loudness/contour/bass EQ buttons are off
(otherwise rated output power will be reached at even lower volume control settings).
The Right Amount of Power
A power-range rating is given in the specifications as a guide to indicate the approximate minimum and
maximum power input of your GoldenEar T66 speakers. Amplifiers that meet or even exceed the speaker's
power-range rating are recommended as their greater power reserves provide better sound. But always use
the speakers within their power-range rating to prevent damage — that is, keep listening levels below the point
of obvious audible distortion.
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GoldenEar T66 Manual
T66 Tower Manual_ENG_FR_05_25_23_DRAFT.indd 6
T66 Tower Manual_ENG_FR_05_25_23_DRAFT.indd 6
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