Just noticed that Amir deleted most of my likes from my old ASR profile. He was so jealous when I had more than he did.
LSA Voyager GAN Amplifier
This 300 wpc amplifier is a real winner.....
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Try as I might, I can’t fathom why you come to this forum to piss and moan about what is going on at a different forum. If you have an issue with ASR and the owner, why aren’t you over there ranting? I don’t, and I am pretty sure most others don’t, care about your issues with ASR.
You are boring me. |
@djones51 No. The reason that tone is used is to look for intermodulations. Those can be quite a bit lower in frequency depending on what other tones are used in the test. How well it does with this test can say a lot about how relaxed/easy going the amp is to listen to since intermodulation distortion is very audible.
I seriously doubt any class D amp would 'struggle' with a 15KHz tone. If they are at all competent, the amp would just sit there and do it all day. I agree with the rest of this quote though- most amps have insufficient feedback owing to insufficient gain bandwidth product to support the feedback at higher frequencies- so the distortion often rises above 1KHz (contributing to harshness and brightness). I think this might be why distortion is often measured at only 100Hz, so as to cover up that issue. I agree that the spec sheets are mostly marketing tools because they almost never tell you any of the more meaningful information, such as you pointed out above ('...THD+N vs power vs frequency over a 20-20k bandwidth'). Such a graph would instantly show who has the gain bandwidth product and who doesn't. Heaven help us if the spec sheets actually showed something useful...
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- 1033 posts total