Damping Factor


I firmly believe a quoted Damping Factor on Audio Power Amplifier outputs of 10, or possibly as low as 5 is perfectly adequate to ensure perfectly good quality sound reproduction from the majority of loudspeaker systems.
Can anyone enlightem me why particular emphasis and value is given to damping factors of 1000 or more for certain Solid State Amplifiers other than advertising value. A high Damping Factor is related to amplifier output impedance, and comes automatically with amplifiers having heavy feedback, not necessarily good ones.
poulkirk313e
There was an extensive explanaion of Damping Factors recently posted to the rec.audio.tech newsgroup. It may not be on your servers stil, but Deja will have it.
Could be helpful.
Damping factor is the ability of the power source to control the unwanted movement of the woofer. IE: the woofer only moves when the signal sez, not just because it is out of control. High damping factor=control. And yes a factor of 10 is adequate.. just a factor of 1000 is a LOT more than adequate
Is "zero feedback" in an amplifier design referring to damping in any way?