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You hit on my recipe for audio fun these days It is hard to find dual mono preamps, don't know why, but they are rare.
When you say less blending does this mean if on some tracks I hear cymbal crashes in both speakers (2 diff cymbals mind you) but in the center satge there might be a piano (I don't think a jazz drum kit is wider tham a grand piano) this kinda of thing would be lessened?I hope this makes sense, I hear this on Barbers-Cafe Blue or is that imagining simply a product of mic placement and mixing? It seems to me when this happens (the drums now take up the whole width of the stage and this makes no sense.Any insight you might pass my way would be appreciatted, I thought blending was good in the middle hol;ding the stereo image together or am I confusing to different thgings. I am starting to eye monos and am getting curious just what I am missing.Thanks in advance,
True dual mono designs have two power supply's. The power supply is one of the most important pieces of an amplifier. The beefier the power supply, all other things being equal, the more natural the presentation and the more bass control (damping of the woofer).
Quote from: Marbles on 13 May 2007, 04:30 pmTrue dual mono designs have two power supply's. The power supply is one of the most important pieces of an amplifier. The beefier the power supply, all other things being equal, the more natural the presentation and the more bass control (damping of the woofer).True. But what about an amp that uses 500VA trannies (dual mono) vs. an amp that has a 1.5KV one for stereo?How about a dual mono amp that has 40K uf capacitance per side, and a stereo amp that has 200K total...I'd love someone that has done actual tests of the two, in "controlled" settings, to describe what they heard, though as of now, it is good to hear everyone's response and Marbles...I agree with you...having the supply on each side/mono'd can "dedicate" the supply to each side rather than have to share it...but I still question how an overkill stereo transformer with overkill capacitance isn't the "headroom" of dual monos.
Aren't the larger toroidal xfmrs more prone to humming than (2) smaller ones?
DECWARE "ZTPRE " is a mono preamp and here is what the builder writes , quote - "If a guy was to build an all-out preamp with the intention of using it in a world class reference system there might be few things he would realize right off the bat. Things like - What would be the point in having monoblocks if you're going to drive them with a stereo preamp? To keep from undoing some of the benefits of using two or more mono amplifiers, the preamp would also have to be dual mono. That means no parts including the power supplies are shared between channels. He also might realize that since channel separation is the theme behind dual mono, balance controls or ganged volume pots are out. The only way to do it right would be to use two separate volume controls.http://www.decware.com/preamp/ztpre.htmHe forgot to mention that the DAC/CDP needs to be dual mono also..."everything" in the chain must be dual mono to "realize" this all-out world class reference system. You would indeed need two seperate pots for every single component in the system.One thing uncertain about this person's statement is what others have been discussing as being, on the most part, an agreement that dual mono amplifiers do provide benefits over a stereo amplifier...I would personally love to hear a designer's absolute very best all stereo system compared to their absolute best all mono based system...I would wager that one cannot hear the difference, but I do know engineers designing all out, to be the most reference based front ends, and doing all mono based topology...so on paper, to them, they see it as being the most that can come from a stereo system.I personally do not see how, if an amplifier is designed exactly the same, given the same exact components necessary to fullfill the amp's needs (proper PS/trannies/etc.) that one can hear big differences...at the same time, I have to wonder if I can hear it in a listening session as I do not rule out the differences that might be heard.But again, as you stated, why don't we see two volume pots for dual mono amplifiers?...well, aside from tube amps or amplifiers that are in seperate enclosures, etc...how about all the amps in the same enclosure using one volume/stereo pot to drive a dual mono design? What's the difference there?