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i really like this amp with my revalation.it's sound exactly how u guys describe it.i was wondering since tommy built this amp .Can He's separated the power supply from the amp.like Naim does their?maybe That will take this amp to another level. aalapsan
i really like this amp with my revalation.it's sound exactly how u guys describe it.i was wondering since tommy built this amp .Can He's separated the power supply from the amp.like Naim does their?maybe That will take this amp to another level.
What will take this amp design to another level, are mono versions that put out over 1000 watts into 8 ohms. I suggested this to Tommy when I had the DAC4800A here for evalution.BTW- IMO, the DAC4800A is a better sounding amp than the AVA Insight 440H, I recently tested.
AFAIK the amps are bridgeable for the power you seek, but I know that's not really mono. But I had another idea - "Mono" amps that are two-channel for vertical bi-amping. So, each amp would have a single input but that would get split into two channels, so the bass can use the 90+% (?) of the power supply that it needs in one chanel, and the treble can use the bit that it needs from the single power supply w/out being bothered by the demands of the bass. Separate speaker jacks of course.Just a thought...-Mike
First, a two channel amp ain't mono
Didn't ever say it was actually a good idea did I?
Quote from: mfsoa on 21 Dec 2008, 10:01 pmDidn't ever say it was actually a good idea did I? I agree it's not a good idea.
Given a conventional biwire-ready speaker w/ internal crossovers biwired to a single amp tap, the tweeter/mid aren't drawing the same power that the woofer is (I'm pretty sure). The crossovers see the same voltage, but the drivers don't see the same power. Otherwise if you biamped with lets say a 400 watt amp on the woofer portion, you would need the same 400 watts for the tweeter, which is not the case. When biwiring, the tweeter is probably using fractions of a watt even though it is connected to the same thing the woofer is. The crossover doesn't dissipate the extra energy, it simply never asks for that energy to be sent to its drivers. (Again, I think this is the way to think of it, please 'splain it better to me if you can ). I can't imagine the heat that would be cooped up in a little mid/tweeter cabinet if the crossover actually had to dissipate that much energy Therefore, in a stereo amp w/ one transformer used for vertical biamping, the majority of the power would be available for the bass and the treble would use very little. The channel that produces the treble would then have a much easier task of things, which I could certainly see resulting an an improvement in sound. Therefore in my theoretical VBA amp that uses only 1 input for both the L and R channels (actually, bass and treble channels), you can vertical biamp a 2 ch stereo with a single pair of interconnects, making this a possibility for people with only 1 pr of preamp outs, or freeing up a pair for some other use if the pre has 2 pr of outputs.See, not so bad an idea after all -Mike
My passive is the Channel Islands Audio PLC.1....
Quote from: mfsoa on 21 Dec 2008, 10:01 pmDidn't ever say it was actually a good idea did I? I agree it's not a good idea.Unless there's a crossover before or inside your "Mono" amp both channels will get a full range signal, draw the same amount of current from the power supply, output a full range signal on both channnels and the speaker's crossoverwill have to dissipate the wasted power sent to the mid/tweets.Mele Kalikimaka!
Quote from: CSI on 21 Dec 2008, 12:28 amMy passive is the Channel Islands Audio PLC.1....I'm curious to learn how a passive attenuator could work assuming the input Z on the Cherry is very low as is the DAC4800A?-jim
Quote from: jhm731 on 21 Dec 2008, 11:13 pmQuote from: mfsoa on 21 Dec 2008, 10:01 pmDidn't ever say it was actually a good idea did I? I agree it's not a good idea.Unless there's a crossover before or inside your "Mono" amp both channels will get a full range signal, draw the same amount of current from the power supply, output a full range signal on both channnels and the speaker's crossoverwill have to dissipate the wasted power sent to the mid/tweets.Mele Kalikimaka! Actually, typical crossovers will NOT load the amp across the band. For instance, the simplest of crossovers is merely an inductor or cap in series with the driver. A cap to reject lows or an inductor to reject highs. In this simple example, the amp is not loaded with bass if it only drives the tweeter through a cap --- even if the input to the amp has lots of bass. The advantage of driving a high frequency element, even though a crossover, directly with a separate amp is that there is definitely a smaller power requirement than full range. Mike's idea is not new, and definitely not bad.By the way, some fancier crossovers try to look as resistive as possible to make them easier to drive and that can add load farther out from the drivers range. Now, somewhere, I have info on spectral content for specific music tracks... Using that info, it's possible to determine high/low bi-amping power requirements. It certainly varies based on content (or genre).Happy New Year to all.
Tommy, perhaps you can please answer this question, which I know for a fact is scaring away a few potential buyers of these new switching technology amps.I have been hearing some rumor lately, that some of these new types of switching amps can have high enough switching-frequencies and voltages, that they can thus actually produce and emit some low-level x-ray radiation. Is this potentially correct, even in theory?I realize this is a weird question, but I don't like to settle for anecdotal information - I'd rather ask an expert (you) for a detailed reply.Thanks in advance.
...Switching amplifiers emit a small amount of EMR at frequencies from 100KHz to 10MHz just like any switching power supply you might find in your house. No X-RAY radiation (30 petahertz to 30 exahertz)! Thanks for the post.
And since I've already blapped more than I should I can tell you guys that he is intimately familiar with the operation of the UcD and ICE modules, and feels absolutely confidant that his designs are superior in both theory and implementation.