TVAD:On the other hand, we can also not exclude the possibility that he is right. In the acknowledgments section of his book, Harley thanks several experts in specific fields of audio who provided technical review of his manuscript. I am going to take the viewpoint that they know their fields, and that therefore the information provided in the book has been determined to be correct.
TVAD,
Let's try an example, because I suspect that there is some misunderstanding somewhere in the path from what Harley meant to say, to the words he used, to your interpretation of his words, and to my interpretation of your words.
We have a speaker that is 4 ohms in the bass, 8 ohms in the treble, and an amplifier that we are assuming has an output impedance which is negligible in relation to 4 ohms, and which can put out 250 watts into 8 ohms. And we are assuming that the speaker, like most speakers (especially enclosed box type speakers) is designed based on voltage paradigm principles.
Let's say the amplifier is putting out a treble tone of amplitude 8.94 volts, which is 10 watts into the 8 ohm speaker impedance in the treble region. The corresponding current that will flow at that frequency is 10/8.94 = 1.12 amps.
Let's then say that the system is also called upon to put out an equal volume bass tone (either simultaneously or at a different time; it doesn't matter for purposes of this example).
My first contention is that the amplifier will then put out a bass tone which is also 8.94 volts in amplitude, which will correspond to a power delivery, into the 4 ohm impedance which the speaker has in the bass region, of 20 watts, and a current flow of 2.24 amps.
My second contention is that, everything else being equal, an amplifier that can provide 250 watts into 8 ohms but cannot double its maximum power into 4 ohms will handle that situation no differently than an amplifier that can provide 250 watts into 8 ohms but can double its maximum power into 4 ohms.
And my interpretation of your original post, based on your interpretation of Harley's book, is that in this situation you and/or he claim that the amplifier which can double its maximum power into 4 ohms will deliver the 20 watts, while the amplifier which cannot double its maximum power into 4 ohms will deliver something less than the 20 watts, thereby resulting in excessive brightness. Which I contend is wrong.
So am I correct in thinking that there is a misinterpretation somewhere, or do you in fact disagree with any of my contentions above?
Best,
-- Al