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very nice thread.i'm curious of what the results would be with the digital only mods using the sb as a transport.
The Amp Hour rating tells you how much amperage is available when discharged evenly over a 20 hour period. The amp hour rating is cumulative, so in order to know how many constant amps the battery will output for 20 hours, you have to divide the amp hour rating by 20. Example: If a battery has an amp hour rating of 10, dividing by 20 = 0.5. Such a battery can carry a 1/2 amp load for 20 hours before dropping to 10.5 volts. (10.5 volts is the fully discharged level, at which point the battery needs to be recharged.)
4. The Red Wine SB3 was not there for the second session with the Bolder UPS. But given given how much better Robert and Woodsyi thought the UPS was than the power supplies I heard, I suspect the Red Wine SB3 might, just might ( ), have come in an honorable second to a Bolder SB powered by the UPS. ..
I don't know that the perfect synching had anything to do with it, but to me the two SBs semed to change from "slightly different" to "the same" once they got synched.
Some conditioning will be necessary, according to what I've read. And, expensive power cords are really beneficial.I'm feeling pretty good about my RWA units with wall-wart bypass.
6) Removal of the 14V power feed from on-board switching[linear in the SB3] power supply (which feeds the critical 3.3V and 5V regulators used for the internal DAC as well as the SPDIF output buffer), and replace it with the 12V supply line from the external 12V SLA battery enclosure...a much cleaner choice of power supply! 7) Feed the SB2's 5V main input with a linear regulated 5V generated from an external 12V SLA battery enclosure.8 ) Install additional low ESR capacitance to the 5V input (filtering)
Nonetheless, some have insisted that there is a significant measurable and/or audible difference when using a linear supply for the external DC input. I respectfully disagree.I'm willing to accept that there may be audible phenomena not revealed in the following test, but I have yet to find any way of hearing or measuring them myself.
The dAck! is designed for cost-effective ultra-high performance. To approach the performance level of the battery supply, one would require a highly-regulated power supply that is both bulky and expensive. This would dramatically raise the price of the system while decreasing performance. The battery supply improves portability of the unit and improves its performance. The power consumption of the circuit and size of the cells have been optimized to achieve a friendly medium: interactivity, bulk, lifespan, and play time have been carefully balanced for the end user. We do not sacrifice dynamics for the ultra-quiet background of the battery supply.
If the power supply is drawing a maximum of about 1 amp steady state, I would design for 2 to 3 amps for those current surges that can very brief. . . d.b.
I won't wax poetic about it.
....2. I really liked the Felicia. I would describe its sound just as Gordy did -- "a bit softer sounding, perhaps more rolled off or even tube like in it's presentation" -- and I liked what it did. ...