mandeep,
Here is the reasoning behind why you are still OK with your system. Amp and speaker rating are always max ratings.
DSP-AZ1 which have a ''Minimum RMS rating per channel of 130W'' is probably a horrible typo.
No amp will power up and start belting out power in watts.
There are 3 primary factors in amp-speaker match up, voltage, resistance, current. All of this is summed up by Ohm's law (V=I*R or I = V/R)
An amp's function is to take a small voltage signal and amplify it to a larger voltage signal (predetermined by gain of the amp).
The volume control is the one that determines the small voltage part.
Amp presents this large voltage signal to the speaker, which in turn presents an impedance or in simpler terms resistance.
To maintain this amplified voltage at a given resistance, the power supply in the amp must supply sufficient current (I = V/R)
If it cannot supply the current, the voltage will be clipped, hence the term clipping (most of the time sound distortion is due to this).
Trust me, you will never be able to drive the amp-speaker to clipping levels unless you go temporarily or permanently deaf.
Here is why.
Lets talk about another spec of the speaker, sensitivity. This is stated as xx dB SPL (sound pressure level)
Meaning a speaker will put out xx dB of sound at a distance of 1 m with a voltage of 2.83V at a nominal impedance of 8 ohm.
This also means 1W of power will produce xx dB at 1 m distance.
The 8900 is an 89dB SPL speaker. WH-2 is an 88 dB SPL speaker.
Say you are at a distance of about 2-3 m from the front and surround speakers. Say you need about 90 dB of SPL to enjoy a movie at listening position.
Mind you it is very high; constant exposure to such levels can cause deafness (temporary and/or permanent).
Both the 8900s and WH-2s need only a few watts to reach this SPL. Roughly 10-20 watts.
Even if there are demanding passages in the movie sound track you are in need of a 3dB boost. About 30-40W of power.
See all is well within safe operating range of the equipment you own, except one, your ears.
So keep the volume reasonable and get a sub to share the load of LFE in a soundtrack. The rest will fall in place.
FYI, I drive 120W (max) rated speakers from 200W (max) rated amp. No harm no foul as long as I don't crank it up.
If I do, my ears and definitely my neighbors will complain before the equipment does.
Enjoy and cherish your setup!!
Cheers,
Raghu