0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 126417 times.
I just took the plunge this evening. Unless things go better at work, this will probably be my last purchase for a few months. I will be comparing this unit directly to the Sony AVD S50 ES. Now its just a waiting game, and waiting to receive a reply from stereovox so I can order the digital cable.
. Is there any type of damping factor (digital amps??) in the Panny that could affect the bass in your speakers vs. your other amp? How do you like the overall musicality? Does one amp seem more right to you?
Digital amplifiers like the S-Master Pro design can be highly accurate—insome respects they can even be too accurate. Phase linearity is an issue withanalog amplifiers and a contributor to analog sound. When you connect a realworldamplifier to a real-world loudspeaker, the interaction causes significantdeparture from phase linearity at frequencies below 30 or 50 Hz. Sony studiesshow a typical deviation from linear phase of about +90 degrees. While notmaking the bass any louder or softer, this shift does have a subtle effect, creatingwarmer and more accessible bass.Because this phase shift is common across many brands of amplifiers atmany price points, the shift has a broad effect on loudspeaker design.Consciously or not, loudspeaker designers take this phase shift into accountwhen they fine-tune the sound of their products.This raises an interesting dilemma. Should a new digital amplifierincorporate this phase shift or leave the sound in its original state? Afterextensive listening tests, Sony decided to give users the choice of applying anequivalent phase shift in the digital domain, using a dedicated Digital SignalProcessor, the Sony CXD9776Q. This LSI adjusts low-frequency phase withinternal accuracy equal to a 65-bit process. We call this circuit the DC PhaseLinearizer, because it "restores" low-frequency phase, emulating the signal thatthe speaker would get from a top-quality analog amplifier.
Regarding the bass phase lineariser circuit: this feature is defeatable on the Sony digital receivers. See Customize menu, Advanced Settings, DC P. linearizer and set it to Off.
I purchased the SA-XR45 about two weeks ago. Indeed it is a lot of amplification for the $. I have found it to work remarkably well for HT, but I am less enthusiastic about the two channel music reproduction. My concern is low frequency response, especially low level low frequency response. For instance, the first two minutes of the "Saturn" section of Holst's "The Planets," or the opening of Stravinsky's "The Firebird Suite," or the cut "You Look Good to Me" on the Oscar Peterson release "We Get Reques ...
Quote from: zzoliRegarding the bass phase lineariser circuit: this feature is defeatable on the Sony digital receivers. See Customize menu, Advanced Settings, DC P. linearizer and set it to Off.I am interested in buying one of these Sony 'Digital Drive' receivers. I have heard a lot about the Panasonic but there is not enough feedback on the Sony's. I guess you have one, how would you compare it with some 1-2K Int amps and .5-1K player ?