0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 76939 times.
I've been listening to Sting's Brand New Day and James Taylor's Hourglass, both excellent cd's that I know in and out. Sometimes you hear extra detail because something else is taken away, and in this case the lack of bass clearly accentuates the upper mids. But, it doesn't change the fact that there is a special ability to split instruments, duets, different drums within the drumset, etc. into their separate spaces. Pretty dang cool at this price point.
Missing bass? One if the reasons I like these amps is that they do produce bass. Are you running the amp stock?
Absolutely stock. Just got it today and got it running a couple of hours ago. Where would you mod first to improve bass? At least it's on batteries, so no power supply issues.
Toss the diode, add lots of parallel power caps, and get a good one for the board. (The stock is probably like 20 speed). Generally robust power allows bass.
For those of us still learning This amp follows the "Stand-alone low-cost application" schematic in this datasheethttp://www.st.com/web/en/resource/technical/document/datasheet/CD00001048.pdfD1 (the p-n diode) is only there to protect against the DC power supply failing or being hooked up backwards.D2 (the LED) and it's currect limiting resistor (R1) are for looks only.D1 could be replaced with a wire, and the amp would get an extra .7 volts (big deal, I know, but...)D2 (the LED) could be removed. Not sure of the advantage.Am I close?Thanks, Mike
So I don't see D1 on these schematics From the description, must be connected to VCC.If I had one of these, I would jumper out D1, and see if it makes a difference.
A generous member is sending me a unit that had a damaged pot.