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I'll be curious to read what you think...
In my system and to my ears the SDS sounds better. Yes, cleaner with more micro detail. What I mean't was about the resistor instead of the pots. I'm still over this one.
No trial and no error, just measure the resistance you've dialed in with the pot and get resistors of that value.
Anand, thank you! Very informitive, i guess then another test would be to try a better pot, i like having the flexablility of adjustment.Are the plastic one's 10K?
Anybody who has a good oscilloscope, please corroborate, it would be nice to know what resistance settings correspond to various levels of gain, either in dB or "X".Anand.
Can anyone explain from a technical perspective why two resistors in a voltage divider configuration with resistances being the same as the original pot would cause the sound to be different? I am baffled!Thanks,Rod
Well, whenever you start discussion 'sound quality' there is a lot of speculation and subjective opinion involved, but.....First, the fixed resistor is replacing not only the resistive element of the pot, but also a long wire that connects the pot to the board. Since this resistive element is in the feedback loop, it is rather sensitive to contamination from emi/rfi etc. Eliminating the wire is likely to be a large part of the improvement.Of course, I think the original mod was simply to stick the resistor at the end of the same long wire and that was also reported to be an improvement, so it's possible that the quality of the resistive element is also a factor. I don't think it's too much of a stretch to think that a conductive plastic pot and the associated mechanical contact has a different noise/distortion signature than a fixed resistor. Whether this is enough to be an audible factor even in a feedback loop is a valid question, but it's not uncommon for people to report significant benefit when switching from a cheap pot to a stepped attenuator in a preamp - in fact it seems to almost be 'accepted wisdom' that stepped attenuators using fixed resistors are much better.So, it's probably a collection of factors- eliminating the long wire leads- eliminating the mechanical contact in the pot- replacing the conductive plastic element with a fixed resistor.As always, YMMV.
Nick and all,Let's learn to walk before we run!Anand.
In any case, it was pretty obvious to me that using resistors in place of the pots clearly improved the quality of the sound of the SDS amp I own. Neil