In the First Watt product literature one can see that the Sit 1/2 produce more wattage into an 8 ohm loudspeaker impedance than into a 4. Likewise, it is the opposite for the Sit 3, which produces less. So would this trend apply for, say a 16 ohm impedance?
ln his review of the Sit3 in Stereophile, HR, mentions that the Sit3 did not work well into 16 ohm loads, specifically with the Falcon Ls3/5a and a Druid loudspeaker.
Any clarification is welcome.
ln his review of the Sit3 in Stereophile, HR, mentions that the Sit3 did not work well into 16 ohm loads, specifically with the Falcon Ls3/5a and a Druid loudspeaker.
Any clarification is welcome.
well , those are sissy speakers 
Sit 3 ( or , to be precise - my DEFiSIT) is singing beautifully with my 16R speakers
and I even didn't bother to try 16R dummy in parallel
only catch is that my speakers are rare as Dodo - RCA LC1B


Sit 3 ( or , to be precise - my DEFiSIT) is singing beautifully with my 16R speakers
and I even didn't bother to try 16R dummy in parallel
only catch is that my speakers are rare as Dodo - RCA LC1B

The SIT-3 measures fine into higher impedance loads, but the load-line
characteristic has been set up ideally for 4 to 8 ohms. If you have a
high impedance load, you just put some resistance in parallel with it to
bring it down if you like.
This is not the same phenomenon as the SIT-1 or 2, as they have the
device operated as single-ended Common Source mode. The SIT-3 is
push-pull Common Drain.
characteristic has been set up ideally for 4 to 8 ohms. If you have a
high impedance load, you just put some resistance in parallel with it to
bring it down if you like.
This is not the same phenomenon as the SIT-1 or 2, as they have the
device operated as single-ended Common Source mode. The SIT-3 is
push-pull Common Drain.
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