09-14-11: Atmasphere
Paperw8, the amp I mentioned in my example draws 500W from the wall at full power.
i've got light fixtures that draw more power than that, so 500w is not a ridiculous power draw.
09-14-11: Atmasphere
If you dig around on this forum, you will find that the idea that the stereo sounds better late at night is a fairly common experience. IOW you are right that other loads on the AC line do indeed affect the sound of many stereos.
if you're telling me that audio equipment makers are selling equipment where the power output swings wildly as a result of only a few tenths of a volt difference in power from the wall, that i would say that some pretty shaky equipment is being sold at top dollar prices. one of the things that i appreciate in your comments it that it helps me understand how very challenging it is to design a power amplifier - in fact, it seems to me that that might be the most challenging device to design - but all the same, i would have thought that the power supplies in these devices were a regulated a bit better than your comments would lead me to believe.
09-14-11: Atmasphere
Finally, with regard to the posts you are trading with Al, if you have ever heard of a first-order crossover in a speaker, that is a filter that is as simple as they get. A first-order crossover is of course 6db/octave. I don't think I have ever heard of a 3db/octave filter, but such a filter would actually need *more* parts to make it happen.
here's the problem: referring to the henry ort reference, ort is correct, dB is, strictly speaking, a ratio of power levels. the problem is that it is true that people have also (and admitted incorrectly if you want to be a strict constructionist about it) used dB to refer to ratios of other quantities. that has led to confusion. when you say that a first order filter falls off by 6dB/octave, that is a statement of how the power levels change.
to give you an example of the confusion, if you look at a bryston schematic, where they have the balanced inputs, they use a resistor ladder to reduce the voltage by 1/2. they refer to the reduction as a 3dB reduction in the schematic. if you use the 20log(v2/v1) equation, you would get a 6dB reduction.
i suppose the proper course of action is to maintain the strict construction of what a dB is; i.e. that it is only used to inform on what is going on with power levels and nothing else.