I have the stereomour driving coincident triumphs, '97 version which are 8 ohm bookshelf's rated at 91 db, and my listening room/living room is unscientifically paced off at 16x19 ish. I can say that the stereomour in 2A3 configuration puts out plenty of volume to near uncomfortable listening levels if i wanted. Generally my volume is set between 9 and 12 (0 volume = 6 o'clock on my dial orientation). I can put it up to three o'clock and it rocks the house.
Hat tip to Grainier who, in an earlier post, who correctly predicted that I'd likely have enough volume with the general specs i provided. Beside the lack of extra volume, am I losing out on any other aspect of performance by not having speaker that are in the more sensitive ranges? Like maybe do I add more distortion by having the amp at higher volume levels? Am I missing out on soundstage or imaging at lower volumes?
I'm curious because I'd like to try some speakers in the appropriate sensitivity range but The coincidents absolutely disappear from the room when being driven by the stereomour. While music is playing they look like any other piece of inert furniture in the room such that if some one moved one of them out of the room, it would be a surprise that the sound didn't just keep on coming from the same spot. I could get this in fleeting moments with the ASL wave 8's and certain well recorded material but it doesn't seem like the coincidents have even been connected to power since I hooked up the stereomour this past Saturday. I know im missing a few things or more by using bookshelves (with no sub by the way) but coincidents are my first speaker of any real quality so its my only point of reference and I'm hesitant to shell out cash for what may be a lateral or even step down from what I hear so far from the stereomour and the coincidents.
Any guidance as to what I may be missing beside simply volume by using a lower sensitivity speaker would be appreciated. If I'm not missing much except top end volume, then maybe I should find a suitable sub pairing.