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Frequency response and distortion are different parameters.I had no idea Zaph's site had so much information on it! Looking at the midbass plots, harmonic distortion is generally 40 to 60dB down, which is 0.1 to 1% distortion. Presumably that will go up at higher levels, and down at lower levels. If I understand right he's set the levels to produce 96dB at 1 meter.
Technically, distortion is the introduction of frequency components at the output that are not present at the input. Frequency response measures something different, which is the ratio of output to input level at a given frequency.
Absolutely agree. The frequency response of all loudspeakers is atrocious compared to electronics. Remarkable then that we can still hear such small differences in the latter... but there it is Now, I don't know all that much about microphones, but I suspect that they also have frequency response variations (and distortion) that well exceed the following electronics. It seems to me that what gets recorded is already far from the "real" thing, so obsessing about "accurately" producing the signal that's on the recording medium seems misguided to me... because it's not the thing that you really want to reproduce. Given that, the subjective impression of how "real" something sounds is the best metric.So there's my 2c
John,If I misinterpreted your comments I'm sorry. Given the context of the last few points (valve vs SS) it seemed as if you were saying that frequency response (or THD+N etc) isn't that big an issue when comparing amps because of the microphones. Mike's already said he feels blind tests are a conversation killer, but this line of argument would be a conversation killer for me...there would be no point discussing measurements of replay equipment. As I said, sorry if I read your (or Doug's) comments wrongly.In any case, I hope that clarifies my thoughts. Regards,Darren