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Thanks Mboxler,The hum is coming from the speakers. I am using Mirage speaker OMD 15, OMD 5, OMD C1. Yes it does go away if i remove the interconnects.I am using a UMC-1 as the pre-amp and processor. I have tried lifting ground on all the equipments and it is not helping at all. in fact the problem is very peculiar. There is very little hum (almost inaudible) when everything is connected. But as soon as i play the source, and the hum volume increases. The volume of this hum is the same irrespective to the volume on the UMC-1. When i pause the source the and the music stops... the humm stops after a 2 seconds. So it seems to me that a 50hz, signal is superimposing itself on the interconnects between the umc-1 and the amp boards. Or may be the amps are grounding themselves through the interconnects via the UMC-1 since the amps do not have a ground available to them." ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::It may be an RFI signal, or ground hum, generated by your source or UMC-1 when audio is produced. And your amps without a chassis are picking it up by RF or in the wires.
Has anyone replaced the tantalun input caps with high quality films? I understand this will change the cutoff freq but I am using subs and thus can afford to use 1 or even .5 uf caps here. I am concerned abut RF or EMI pick up with the longer leads. Any experience anyone has had would be appreciated. Thanks and kindest regards John Dozier
I have now found that the input caps are niobium oxide and are much better sounding than tantalum-in fact pretty much SOTA. Thanks for the input though. Regards
im sure this info i buried in this thread (probably a million times) but that class d website is a tremendous headache. i have, after hours of trying to search it, yet to find which amp or kit to buy. i would like to find a 4 ohm amp that is either 500 + 500W stereo or 500W mono. i would also like to get the kit (minus chassis and connecting hardware). if i could find one on amazon, that would be even better as i have a line of credit with them. for instance, what is this:[urlhttp://www.amazon.com/250W-Class-Power-Supply-Transformer/dp/B002E6YXL0/ref=sr_1_5?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1346544898&sr=1-5][/url]is this in 4 ohms? i cannot find any kit listed on the website that matches up with this? (of course that would be easier if the kits weren't listed under 17 different places and had any kind of accurate descriptions).
Twice as much power is only a 3db increase, which is barely audible. To be twice as loud you need a 10db increase which would require a 1000 watt amp in your situation
Twice as much power is only a 3db increase, which is barely audible. To be twice as loud you need a 10db increase which would require a 1000 watt amp in your situation ( and new speakers after you have blown your current ones) Hope this helps explain what is going on. Regards
Decibels are a log function. Compared to 125 watts, 250watts is a 3db increase, 500 watts is a 6db increase, and 1000 watts is a 9db increase.
You're right about the 10db increase, but a 3db increase should be quite noticeable. It's about a 30% difference. Typical humans can easily perceive a 1db difference in volume.