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This is all fairly rude, isn't it? I guess you must feel you are on pretty solid ground, Daryl.
I agree.Maybe there is a REASON JohnR has so many posts.
Wrong again. Bzzzt.
We all know Dan is someone very knowledgeable in this area.As I often do when someone jumps on the seen and starts stirring the pot I clicked on Johns name and viewed his last posts to see if he has said anything intellegent recently.Lin said "maybe there is a REASON John R has so many posts" but I came up dry (I didn't read all 3600 though) and could not find the reason John is able so slap Dan down so easily.
The reason JohnR has a lot of posts is because he has been here since day 1, not because he is a self proclaimed expert on everything out to save all the incompetent masses.
Were all wrong sooner or later.My point is do you dismiss Dan like a fool without a word?
Daryl: slew rate is a measure of how fast a device can change its output signal. If the signal it tries to produce has at any time a first derivative greater than the slew rate, then distortion is the result. Forget about sine waves - think about more complex signals. It seems to me a reasonable hypothesis that one component A may cause a following component B to distort this way, whereas a second component A' may not. And as bpape points out, simply dismissing component B as badly designed may be somewhat missing the point.I thought that the slew rate comment by Karsten was an interesting one, and suggested that one could measure the combination of components rather than the individual pieces as a way to look at "synergy." There are other interactions that could show up this way, such as between driver Q and the high output impedance of SETs. I was surprised that Kevin missed the hint there. What about amplifier behavior on a transient overload condition -- how does the combination of the amplifier circuit with the speaker affect this?Wouldn't those be interesting topics to explore?As for Dan Banquer, I feel obliged to respond, since you've made a big deal out of it. In my opinion, Dan's veneer of so-called knowledge is paper-thin, and he covers for it with his arrogant and condescending manner and attitude. I and others have become very tired of it over the years. I am mostly able to ignore him these days; not as well as I perhaps should, obviously. Don't mistake him as a role model for how to behave on this forum -- to glibly assert one's superiority in technical matters, yet provide little guidance or be willing to engage in a shared learning experience. In other words, you should consider applying what you have said to me to your own posts instead.JohnR
If you are refering to the TIM arguement, I will not even bother to respond further.
Quote from: Dan Banquer on 15 Apr 2007, 12:51 pmIf you are refering to the TIM arguement, I will not even bother to respond further.See?! There it is again
Daryl: slew rate is a measure of how fast a device can change its output signal. If the signal it tries to produce has at any time a first derivative greater than the slew rate, then distortion is the result. Forget about sine waves - think about more complex signals. It seems to me a reasonable hypothesis that one component A may cause a following component B to distort this way, whereas a second component A' may not. And as bpape points out, simply dismissing component B as badly designed may be somewhat missing the point.
Playing and measuring a component with steady state or sweeps will show only frequency related anomolies. Looking at pure single frequency sine waves is largely the same thing. This says nothing about how it reacts in the time domain in terms of reacting to an input signal. What is the delay between input and the device reacting and starting to 'ramp up'? How long does it take for it to get from a quiescent state to full output? How quickly does it stop? None of those things will show up in any frequency related testing. Nor, will any frequency related anomolies show up when testing those things. Please explain how a component that generates ruler flat frequency response guarantees exceptional time domain performance? There are tons of amplifiers that have basically perfectly flat FR in the audible range. Does this mean that they all perform the same in the time domain? Have the same slew rate?None of this really has to do with synergy other than trying to quantify a measurement for each individual piece that when matched, would potentially work well together.Bryan
There are tons of amplifiers that have basically perfectly flat FR in the audible range. Does this mean that they all perform the same in the time domain? Have the same slew rate?
Further if you had millions of tone generators you could set each one to the frequencies of the chart and the magnitude and phase and when you turned them all on they would play 'Oops I did it again' over and over forever (long has this been a dream of mine).
Please explain how a component that generates ruler flat frequency response guarantees exceptional time domain performance? There are tons of amplifiers that have basically perfectly flat FR in the audible range. Does this mean that they all perform the same in the time domain?
Exactly! What had been stated earlier was that FR and time domain are simply different views of the same thing. To me, they're complementary and to be viewed together as you stated. FR by itself cannot determine time domain issues.
Quote from: bpape on 16 Apr 2007, 02:40 amThere are tons of amplifiers that have basically perfectly flat FR in the audible range. Does this mean that they all perform the same in the time domain? Have the same slew rate?Yes, at least if by "perfectly flat FR" you also mean perfectly linear phase response - otherwise there will be (mostly inaudible) time-domain distortions.