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It must be said though that, high as the damping factor is, it will still double into double the load resistance, so quadruple from 2 to 8 ohms - and perhaps this is audible.Another thought is that perhaps the speaker wire should be doubled up or the gauge increased as the load resistance lowers, to remove another variable. The wire almost certainly will have more resistance than the output stage as Bruno says in the white paper:"Output impedance is lower than the resistance of three feet of 4 gauge loudspeaker cable."
IIRC each doubling of gauge = next thicker gauge/next lower whole gauge number: two x AWG12 = AWG11. If correct my equivalent AWG is only 11.
...The wire almost certainly will have more resistance than the output stage as Bruno says in the white paper:"Output impedance is lower than the resistance of three feet of 4 gauge loudspeaker cable."
No Guy, no need. I was being obtuse. My bad. I agree that these NCore threads are getting a little snippy, and my poor excuse for an inside joke didn't help.
I only need 10 or so watts.By the way, just listened to NC400s (hardwired AC, hardwired output wires, OFC unbalanced input jack, Furutech fuse and 10lbs of damped weight on top of each of them)...
OFC means oxygen free copper.....don't know what you think it means.
Almost everyone who listened to the amps on tour unbalanced used the supplied adapters. This simply grounds pin three to pin one......the same as using an RCA jack.....no difference whatsoever. A great sounding rca jack will sound way way better than using an adapter. The only possible? advantage of using an XLR would be to use a floating quasi-balanced interconnect which probably very few have done (you need to have an rca on the input side of the cable and an xlr on the output side).
Two of the three "unbalanced" inputs that Bruno shows on the NC400 data sheet use RCA jacks.
The REAL advantage comes when you fully balance, which I will be hearing soon (fully balanced Oppo going directly into fully balanced NC400).
Having made sufficiently clear that there is, in fact no reason why anyone should ever want to waste a perfectly good balanced input by putting the module in a box with RCA inputs, it is likely that some will persist. (emphasis added)
The only difference between "quasi balanced" and unbalanced is the fact the the negative input of the differential pair is grounded back at the source (one meter away) and not at the load. How much difference sonically does this make? Please enlighten us as to the sonic benefits.
"The only thing real is what you hear. Your senses tell you what is real.....not a scope or measurement tool. The NC1200 measures worse but sounds better"