Amps that can withstand my inwall speaker system


My inwall speaker system has one pair of speaker port and it is connected to Niles MSA-10 speaker selector which supports up to 10 pair of inwall speakers. My house has 9 pairs of speakers.
So, the connection is amp --> speaker port --> Niles --> 9 pair of speakers.
I've used three amps for the inwall speaker system over the past 15 years, and they all failed: NAD 314 (40 WPC), Mitsubishi DA-A7 (75 WPC), and Hafler DH-200 (100 WPC). They all lasted a few weeks and died. Somebody told me that the output transformer has died.

I have a Yarmaha receiver (RX-V3000) and if I turn up the volume to 9 o'clock, the receiver shuts down. I can barely listen to the music with volume set at 9 o'clock.

I have a spare amp (Nakamichi PA-5), but am reluctant to hook it up to the inwall speaker port. Definitely I am not going to try with my Plinus and Audio Research amp.
What would be the problem? Would I need more powerful amp? Or, tube amps may sustain the load better?
Any comment would be appreciated.

128x128ihcho

Showing 3 responses by ihcho

Thanks for your suggestion.
My in-wall speaker system is set up as to work with Niles 10, as seen here.
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/111490/Niles-Msa-10a.html?page=5#manual
Power amp's speaker out --> speaker-in to Niles --> 10 pairs of speakers. There is no source input in Niles. All 10 pairs speakers can be fed from just one input. 
Anthem MDX-16 does not seem to have speaker-in connection.
https://www.anthemav.com/images/mdx/mdx-16-back-panel.jpg
To work with MDX-16, the wires need to be rewired.

Parasound ZoneMaster supports speaker-in.
https://www.parasound.com/product-images/1250_back_black.jpg