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In Reply to: RE: Linear Power Supply or Battery on Mac Mini - pics posted by AbeCollins on December 23, 2014 at 13:00:27
"Absolutely! With hundreds of individual 'load points' (Vcc pins) to test within the computer, and the thousands of variables which can affect the results, we can only assume that the power at each 'load point' is sufficient for proper operation."
There are billions of load points in a computer, but most of them are inside the chips and hence inaccessible without very specialized equipment. The real issue is the definition "proper operation".
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
Follow Ups:
"The real issue is the definition "proper operation"."
Who else would define it besides the component manufacturer? If a manufacturer doesn't supply the info good designers need the good designers won't use their stuff.
"The real issue is the definition'proper operation'."Who else would define it besides the component manufacturer? If a manufacturer doesn't supply the info good designers need the good designers won't use their stuff.
Not correct. The proper operation of the chip according to the chip manufacturer does not necessarily imply proper operation of the motherboard according to the computer system manufacturer. The proper operation of the computer system according to the computer system manufacturer does not imply proper operation of the audio playback chain, according to the audiophile who assembled the playback chain.
If there were complete and accurate engineering specifications at each level and designs used subsystem components in accordance with these specifications, then these problems would not exist, or at the least, it would be possible to identify a particular organization or person who screwed up. However, this is not "real world". This is a particular problem when a digital computer system is used as part of an audio chain that has inadequate isolation from digital noise. Here, there are no specs whatsoever, e.g. there is no DAC on the marketplace that quotes isolation from power noise or digital interconnect noise. Indeed, there is no standard or even widely known method of measuring the impact of this noise on the audio output from the DAC. There are no known engineering methods of correlating measurements with sound quality.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
Edits: 12/26/14
"Not correct. "
Sure it is. At each level of system complexity you get the choice of going integrated or piecing together discretes of your own choosing. Going integrated allows one the luxury of leaving the worrying up to the manufacturers. Limiting your choices to what has been integrated and made commercially available obviously has it's limitations as well. pick your poison.
But for practical reasons we can't get to the 'load points' within a chip so that's why I reduced the count down to hundreds. ;-)
Since we're talking about a computer, and I was talking about preliminary functional tests.... The fact that the computer boots up on the various power supplies and is working as a computer should and like it did before, that would be my definition for 'proper operation'.
You don't need an 'audiophile' power supply to make a computer operate properly.
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