How do we know? Has anyone actually ever heard a straight wire with gain?
How do we know? Has anyone actually ever heard a straight wire with gain?
How do we know? Has anyone actually ever heard a straight wire with gain?
Why would anyone want to hear what is on the record, what a ludicrous idea!Sounds like a plain piece of chicken to me. I like a little spice, a little BBQ sauce, heck even a little lemon or lime. But plain? Not for me.
Mike Him I have edited my signature,
Ultimately you decide upon the sound in your room, personally I don't enjoy adding distortion to every record, I really want to hear what is on the recording.
Keith.
No. It doesn't exist. Regardless of claims being made, all stereo electronics have a sound.How do we know? Has anyone actually ever heard a straight wire with gain?
No. It doesn't exist. Regardless of claims being made, all stereo electronics have a sound.
this one comes pretty close.
I used it for 4 years and it's about as neutral as is possible. it humbled many a mega buck preamp in terms of transparency and clarity in my search to better it (and held it's own in the areas of dynamics and weight in my particular system of that time).
passives are not for every situation.
this one comes pretty close.
I used it for 4 years and it's about as neutral as is possible. it humbled many a mega buck preamp in terms of transparency and clarity in my search to better it (and held it's own in the areas of dynamics and weight in my particular system of that time).
passives are not for every situation.
No a linear amp with extremely low distortion will be audibly transparent, you can test this easily by switching a component in and out of circuit.No. It doesn't exist. Regardless of claims being made, all stereo electronics have a sound.
No a linear amp with extremely low distortion will be audibly transparent, you can test this easily by switching a component in and out of circuit.
Keith.
People love to mention the '70's Japanese amps and the Halcro whenever the low distortion of Bruno Putsey's amps is praised.
The problem with the '70's Japanese amps is that the specs have been found to be outright lies in many cases. With Halcro, there were many superlative reviews of those amps. In any case, using them as an example of why low distortion is somehow less than good is a bit of a straw man argument.
Let's keep in mind that there is more to an amp than low distortion.
Passive preamps are almost straight wires with no gain which are entirely different animals than active devices.
Technical specifications can be difficult to grasp at first, but I would persevere ,you can determine the 'sound' or otherwise of a component from its measured specification.Mark,
Curious that people start claiming power amplifiers behave like wires with gains but most of the time use the preamplifier case to make their points. IMHO in this Mola Mola case the proper debate should be carried using the amplifier in real conditions - using real speakers in stereo as the load.
IMHO many of the tests for wire with gain are flawed - they just used resistors as a load and attenuator, not the modern low impedance speakers with large variance in impedance.
Transparency of a component, defined as bellow, is a difficult concept to test - it can be transparent in a system and non transparent in another. How can we generalize the result?
Fortunately transparency has another meaning for hard core audiophiles ...![]()