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Quote from: rajacat on 1 Apr 2007, 05:49 pmSo do you believe that the SOTA of testing equipment has reached its zenith? There is nothing more to learn in science? That is really flat earth thinking! And putting words in another's mouth isn't any kind of thinking.se
So do you believe that the SOTA of testing equipment has reached its zenith? There is nothing more to learn in science? That is really flat earth thinking!
Just in case you didn't notice, my last post was put forth as a question, albeit concluded with a rhetorical comment.
My listening experience is immeasurably enhanced by invisible flying monkeys, and I'll do you a big favor and sell you invisible bananas (Paypal accepted) to attract them.
I never thought a simple question would turn up so much information. Any way if any body's selling after what they have read, let me know.
Quote from: captain on 2 Apr 2007, 03:46 pmI never thought a simple question would turn up so much information. Any way if any body's selling after what they have read, let me know.Is that the only reason you started this thread? d.b.
Gentleman: This was a thread about Bybee purifiers, filters, resistors etc. etc. From reading that last few pages we are now onto capacitors. I think if you wish to talk about capacitors, please start a new thread, or maybe the moderator can move that part of the thread and re-title it. d.b.
You have to understand, though, that the time-domain/frequency domain transfer functions only work for linear devices. Any non-linearity will not be represented in the transfer functions. If the bybee would have some type of non-linearity (and I'm not saying that it does), then you simply have to take data in both domains. Taking data in one domain and saying that the data therefore describes everything in the othe domain is, for non-linear devices, wrong.
Pretty amazing spec for a non-polar electrolytic cap. At the link, examine figure 7, and notice the very very poor specs of most electrolytic caps, different brands. All are showing their inductance under 10khz, and some, for amplifiers, below 1khz. One shows effects at around 300hz. Is yours a special cap(?), and what brand. http://waltjung.org/PDFs/Picking_Capacitors_1.pdfCheers.
QuotePretty amazing spec for a non-polar electrolytic cap. At the link, examine figure 7, and notice the very very poor specs of most electrolytic caps, different brands. All are showing their inductance under 10khz, and some, for amplifiers, below 1khz. One shows effects at around 300hz. Is yours a special cap(?), and what brand. http://waltjung.org/PDFs/Picking_Capacitors_1.pdfCheers.Hi Steve,"It's just an inexpensive Bennic from Madisound and over 15 years old.">>Any ideas why it measures radically different than the other, well known brands?I bought a mouse today for my measurement computer and I will fire it up when I get the time.The capacitors in that article were power supply caps and not non-polars.">>Bipolars are essentially two electrolytics back to back, so I fail to see your point. The DA should be much higher with a NP than polar."I would not recommend that article at all.">>Are you kidding? Wow. Tell that to Dr. Karl Weber, a chemist, who discusses the subject and what happens at the molecular level. His explanation almost, if not perfectly, correlates to the sound we appear to be contributing to the insulation material in a capacitor.http://www.jacmusic.com/auricap/htm/on_capacitor_dielectric_material.htmThe RCA Radiotron designers handbook (26 engineers) also has a nice description of different capacitors, and their problems and superiority. And it was written some 40-60 years ago. So the knowledge is not new.>>Now back to the regularly scheduled program. If the bybee's main claim is lower noise, why not measure to see if it performs as advertised? Everything appears to have been measured except the claim that the bybee is marketed as.