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So you are trying to lower distortion? At what level is it below the audible threshold?
You might ask when distortion measurement is at the limit of what in the audible world it can measure. That's the real question, isn't it? How else can one explain the improvement of our measuring abilities? On that note, I think Bruno thinks his next amp will be better. I'm interested in the question of how that is possible.I'm one of those guys who doesn't buy that measurements explain more than just a part of what is audibly relevant. And as far as they go, the measurements are good. We fundamentally want an amplifier with zero distortion. Measurements give us an insight into what we then in the language of those measurements can describe as an audibly relevant factor. But there is much more going on in the audio field---I'll call it a field, comprised of inner and outer processes---than measurements can measure. Let me get a little subtle here. Measurements are a means of particularizing. They say and point to this. But what they miss in particularizing---particular being limited, by definition---what they miss in defining and limiting is the relation between the thus-called defined, limited parts (measurements). And because music is one wave, that relation is a relation as of a whole. Only ever one wave---unity, whole. Measurements only ever approximate in the direction of the whole, which is why things improve.Put it this way. We have, among many others, THD measurements and IMD measurements. What measurement gives us how those two relate? Do you see the problem there? If you have the measurement that tells you how those two relate, you have a more powerful measurement than either THD or IMD, in which case you'll be using neither in favour of the more powerful measurement. Quantum physicists don't resort to Newtonian equations to do what quantum physicists do as quantum physics. And nuclear be much more powerful than grind-and-bump force.People get a feel for music, that it's off in this or that way. What is that feeling? It must be an intuited sense of a difference between real and not. We listen to real sounds all day every day. We know what real is. But because it's real, we can't define it---there's nothing to which to compare it! And by extension, it thus is impossible to precisely characterize how something is not real. Why? Because the comparator can't be said. Measurements truly are limited.Gödel in a nutshell.
And none of this addresses the issue of the weak(er) links in the chain. Why spend the time on the strongest link? That makes no sense......
It is interesting that you should find the performance difference so great between the two speaker loads; one of the main design goals and performance targets as expressed many times by Bruno is the load independent response of the ncore.
Looking at the frequency response at different loads confirms this. It might be beneficial to ask Hypex about this.....