Do you always keep the Amplifier powered on


I have Simaudio Integrated Amplifier and it's designed to
be always powered on. Is that O.K in your opinion.
topten
I have 4 2 from each wife-). I have a similar to Kijanki situation with only 20...30w of idle power for preamp/preamp/PC. No biggie to keep it on while home, but would completely unplug from the wall together with power conditioner the whole rig. Sometimes I have to shut down dac/preamp in order to reset and than turn it back on after one minute and it sounds much better.
BEl Canto ref1000m Class D amps (very efficient) - yes

TAD Hibachi monoblocks (less efficient) sometimes but not always
This is and has been a contentious topic of discussion for year hear on Audiogon. The issues have been:

1. sound quality of equipment when left on all the time vs turning the equipment on for an hour or so before serious listening.
2. Energy usage and wasting energy.
3. Summer use and the amps (typically) are space heaters (again wasting energy).

For me, I know that anything left on continuously will degrade the life of components. Equipment with standby modes, reduce this dramatically. This allows for devices to have the capacitors charged, but the bias isn't at maximum.

From a safety point of view, equipment left full on (not in standby mode) is not really a good idea ever. Refrigerators, notwithstanding, because you really don't have a choice. But anything else, it not a good idea.

From a sound perspective, on my equipment, could not distinguish any difference in sound from my equipment being left on or turning it on an hour before listening.

For tubed equipment, there is no way on Earth I would leave it on continuously. Most manufacturers tell you the life of the tubes, If you leave it on, well, that life is dramatically reduced. No way to get around that, unless there is a standby mode that has those tubes turned off.

If you have the money to replace tubes often, then that is your choice.

But, I often see opinions here based on Sound quality and safety, and Safety should always come first.

This is the "it can't happen to me" logic. It always happens to someone else, but not me. Until you come home to a burned house, or you listened to some well intentioned but totally ignorant person and eliminated your ground by lifting the ground to eliminate some noise, and then a fault happens and someone is hurt.

Safety first.

I turn my equipment on about an hour before listening. I unplug all my audio equipment when I leave for a few days or more.

enjoy, but be aware, use common sense and be safe.
+1 Schubert. Kijanski the analogy doesn't hold. If I told you my tap water tasted optimal only after leaving it running for hours, I'd be vilified and probably (and rightly) reported to the city of LA.

Personally, I don't want to waste the tubes in my preamp or power amp but I also don't want to cycle the units on/off more than a couple times a day. My power amp literally takes 30 minutes to stabilize before you can bias it so there's overhead to consider. I also don't trust the thing 100% so safety is a concern.

I'm not taking an absolute moral stance on this but I'm just saying that considering the electrical usage is the responsible thing to do. In Southern California, we are often asked to refrain from non-essential electrical use during peak demand in the summertime. In those instances, using big, power hungry amps just for personal enjoyment would be irresponsible.