Czarivey, where is all this angst and hostility coming from? Are you guys auditioning for 12 Angry Comrades?
Determining current flow to install "audiophile" fuses.
There are 4 fuses in my Odyssey Stratos amp. I recently returned some AMR fuses because they rolled off the highs and lows a little too much for me. Mids were excellent though. Anyway, I'm getting ready to try the Hi-Fi Tuning Classic Gold fuses, as they are on clearance now for $10/ea. Are they any good? However, I have read that they are a directional fuse? Can anyone confirm this? If that is the case, does anyone know the current flow for the Odyssey Stratos? Or, does anyone know how figure out current flow by opening up the top and looking at the circuitry?
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"Where is all this angst and hostility coming from? " Look in the mirror. But I’m sure its no mystery. Repeating the same thing over and over like a parrot no matter what tends to have that effect on people. We know Geofkait says all wires are directional and why already 10X over. Enough already. Your act is getting old and predictable. |
czarivey I know I’ve seen it, he really does stick pins in dolls. And GK you still haven’t posted links to documented fuse manufacturers poof of directionality of fuses. I ask once again please post the links! Cheers George |
When a manufacturer marks it’s fuses with directional arrows it means they believe their fuses are uh, directional. When a manufacturer publishes detailed measurement data that shows differences in resistance depending on direction of the fuse it means the manufacturer believes fuses are directional.Incorrect. They don't mark the fuse with arrows indicating its directionality, they mark it with a logo that is easily confused. This is done to buy into the myth that fuses are directional, and thus they sell more fuses. There is no directional data that exists, at least none that can be verified by independent test. @georgelofi , +1 |
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