Raquel,
The problem with your argument is that in amps in which
there are more than a single output device; the output
devices are in parallel.
No - the signal is not going through more circuitry - all
the electrons see the same amount of circuitry. It's just
that all electrons don't see the same components.
If you have a tube amp with 2 paralleled 300B tubes; all the
electrons saw a single 300B output tube - just not the
same one - 50% saw one tube, 50% saw the other.
The comparison at Singer is worthless. A VERY BIG factor
is the size of the room. One was smaller, one was larger.
The rooms therefore had different resonant frequencies -
and Lord only knows how that affected the sound.
You can't conclude anything even remotely meaningful from
two different rooms, with two different speakers, with
two different amps...
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
The problem with your argument is that in amps in which
there are more than a single output device; the output
devices are in parallel.
No - the signal is not going through more circuitry - all
the electrons see the same amount of circuitry. It's just
that all electrons don't see the same components.
If you have a tube amp with 2 paralleled 300B tubes; all the
electrons saw a single 300B output tube - just not the
same one - 50% saw one tube, 50% saw the other.
The comparison at Singer is worthless. A VERY BIG factor
is the size of the room. One was smaller, one was larger.
The rooms therefore had different resonant frequencies -
and Lord only knows how that affected the sound.
You can't conclude anything even remotely meaningful from
two different rooms, with two different speakers, with
two different amps...
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist