In Reply to: RE: nobody is afraid of your ideas. posted by tube wrangler on January 25, 2010 at 06:03:04:
----When you change the operating levels (add stresses)-- such as demanding more RPM or torque from an engine, or facing an amplifier with a higher frequency, etc., I think I'm right to state that you want a natural rolloff to occur, which does not stress any part in the system.
Well Dennis, so far it looks to me that the stresses on the amp's parts go down, and not up with increasing frequency, within what is usually considered the hearing spectrum for humans anyway. If you'd be so kind, please point to one bit that would suffer at 10 kHz.
----Now, I know that it is not fashionable to think in this way.
It isn't useful either. Unless you've got something to sell.
----It is true that many solid state amps, and some tube models have been designed to get those "flat" curves. Too bad that they will not reproduce music accurately, but instead, sound unreal, synthetic, flat, not like hearing the live performance at all...
You show a very limited experience with good tube amps...again.
cheers,
Douglas
Friend, I would not hurt thee for the world...but thou art standing where I am about to shoot.
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Follow Ups
- RE: nobody is afraid of your ideas. - PakProtector 08:49:58 01/25/10 (0)