0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic. Read 153988 times.
I have a customer bought a DEQX, and the agony of choice eventually got to him. He no longer uses it, unfortunately, a wasted resource.
...DIYaudio forum and been pilloried by some of the smartest guys in the room. It is difficult to discuss things with these guys as they really are frightfully intelligent, and have formed a very negative judgment well in advance...
Bridging? Nah..... I don't recommend it, because along with the increased power comes double the current, and this must pass through the same output stage at both ends of the waveform...
The NAKSA output stage is pushed hard, with a single pair on 42V rails, and to effectively bridge it you would need two pairs on each amp. The best and most economical option would be to simply build out the output stage on a NAKSA and increase the rail voltage...
...Nobody should treat a forum as a pulpit, no matter what the temptation is....Cheers, Joe
JoeI thoroughly enjoyed your entire post, especially the quotes. Please excuse my quoting only one little part, which I found especially enticing. I've read much about the history of the so-called church, or what is more aptly described by the great author/researcher Michael Hoffman as "churchianity". There is good documentation that the pulpit itself has absolutely no basis in the scriptures...
While the Bible may have many universal truths, a literal interpretation can be dangerous and limiting IMO.
Depends on what you mean by a "literal interpretation"? Even that is limiting the discussion, if we were to have one here, but perhaps not the right place. A parable (and there are quite a few) are not literal, but they illustrate and teach an essential point, whether truth or a moral lesson of some kind. Taking a parable literal would be pointless, right? And then miss the point entirely at the same time. No, it is context that rules.Try to explain literally the sound of an oboe. I defy your capability to do that. Literalness sets limits that are neither wise nor practical.Cheers, Joe
Hi Hugh, I agree with your ideals on the Harmonic distribution as a waterfall on paper, monotonically decreasing, but if I may add, I think just as important as this is, its also important that this also be consistent across the Audio band(in its order, and quantity) from 20hz to 20khz. As we know, most amplifiers have immeasureable distortion at 100hz and up to 1khz, and after this 1khz area it dramatically increases hence why most amplifiers only give an averaged 1khz measurement. This seems to have a profound effect on the sonic relationship, just as profound as the Monotonically decreasing factor..Colin
Btw Joe, wen I was living in Montreal and doing astronomy in the 80's, there was a man name Rasmussen who was working in aeronautic and doing small machining and electronics job for our Dorval astronomy club. Is it somebody of your family (maby a cousin in Canada) ?Gaetan
Hi Gaetan, I agree, Thd is not really that useful, the spectrum is I believe, but more importantly ive found feedback must also be scrupulously, carefully used to achieve not Low distortion, but!, more of an even handed approach. its common knowledge that excessive feedback will lower distortion but the more there is, and being limited by stability margins, phase shift, and the need to drive a reactive load this feedback becomes less and less useful at HF with increased db levels.. Colin