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Bi-wiring
"Stephen Judge" wrote in message
... Sorry for being so dense but how does one do it ? My monoblocks each have a single pair of speaker outlets, my speakers two pairs of connecting posts with a bridging strap in place. Do I simply run double leads from the amp to each separate speaker post and remove the bridging strap ? Thanks Article on bi-wired amps http://www.sound.westhost.com/bi-amp.htm Hope this helps. Regards --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.505 / Virus Database: 302 - Release Date: 30-Jul-2003 |
Bi-wiring
Article on bi-wired amps
http://www.sound.westhost.com/bi-amp.htm Hope this helps. Not much :-) That's about bi-amping, an established technique. They're talking about bi-wiring, which is snake-oil. |
Bi-wiring
"Chris Morriss" wrote in message ... In message , Kurt Hamster Don't forget that the difference between 0 and 1 is greater than the difference between 1 and 1,000,000. Wrong again. Is it? Yes. You're wrong then. Simple as that. No, Stewart's quite right. 'Difference' is a precise mathematical statement. The difference between 0 and 1 is 1. Now if you had said 'ratio', that would have been a very different thing. -- Chris Morriss Ah, but things are different from numbers, at least to most people. What's the difference between having no cd players and one? In terms of love, expectation, cost, room space and so on. Between none and two? One and two? Perhaps if I phrased it in terms of Audis. No, that wouldn't work. Rob |
Bi-wiring
.... or even a Polo. Yes but thought Pinky might just put more thought into it this way. He might disagree with a polo lol. WOW you jump in and enjoy your journey to work AND back. Vrooooooooooooooom Yea who's got the keys? Steve |
Bi-wiring
On Sat, 2 Aug 2003 21:21:51 +0100, "RJH"
wrote: "Chris Morriss" wrote in message ... In message , Kurt Hamster Don't forget that the difference between 0 and 1 is greater than the difference between 1 and 1,000,000. Wrong again. Is it? Yes. You're wrong then. Simple as that. No, Stewart's quite right. 'Difference' is a precise mathematical statement. The difference between 0 and 1 is 1. Now if you had said 'ratio', that would have been a very different thing. -- Chris Morriss Ah, but things are different from numbers, at least to most people. Quite so, but Kurt didn't say 'the difference between one thing and nothing', did he? He used numbers. What's the difference between having no cd players and one? In terms of love, expectation, cost, room space and so on. Between none and two? One and two? Perhaps if I phrased it in terms of Audis. No, that wouldn't work. Actually, we do have two Audis, and they both work. :-) -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Bi-wiring
I had some spare cable anyway so tried bi-wiring with two single channel monoblocks. If it made a difference I'm still struggling to hear it ! Perhaps I'll try again if I move to bi-amping. Bi-amping will almost certainly make an audible difference. Whether it's an improvement..... Always remember: Expensive + Different = Better :-) |
Bi-wiring
In article ,
Stephen Judge wrote: I had some spare cable anyway so tried bi-wiring with two single channel monoblocks. If it made a difference I'm still struggling to hear it ! I'm not surprised. ;-) Perhaps I'll try again if I move to bi-amping. That's a more expensive experiment. If you mean just two amps effectively in parallel, again there will be no benefit unless you need (and the speakers can handle) the extra power. Proper bi-amping involves a crossover before the power amps and not using the one in the speaker. But this requires proper design to give an improvement unless the speakers have poorly designed crossovers - unlikely in decent makes. -- *A day without sunshine is like... night. Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
Bi-wiring
In article ,
Arny Krueger wrote: Proper bi-amping involves a crossover before the power amps and not using the one in the speaker. But this requires proper design to give an improvement unless the speakers have poorly designed crossovers - unlikely in decent makes. Widely successfully employed with subwoofers, though. Indeed. The benefits are even more so with low frequencies due to the greater power required. A well designed passive crossover at say 50 hz made to handle 150 watts would be pretty costly. -- *Gaffer tape - The Force, light and dark sides - holds the universe together* Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
Bi-wiring
I always thought active was the way to go if you could afford it.
Does not going active reap benefits of the following: 1. less strain on the amps due to frequency bandwidth 2. Increased speaker efficiency therefore more dynamic range 3. Improved amplifier control of speakers through damping factor. And a few more likely that dont come to mind. Maybe. But might not sound any better than a nice amplifier driving a nice 2-way speaker with a well-designed crossover. Complicated systems introduce a lot more ways to go wrong! |
Bi-wiring
In article ,
Stevie Boy wrote: I always thought active was the way to go if you could afford it. Does not going active reap benefits of the following: 1. less strain on the amps due to frequency bandwidth A good amp shouldn't be worried by what it's driving. 2. Increased speaker efficiency therefore more dynamic range The limiting factor will still be toasting the speaker voice coils if you have sufficient power. 3. Improved amplifier control of speakers through damping factor. Could be, although most crossovers will effectively couple the bass driver direct to the amp at the frequencies where damping factor matters. And a few more likely that dont come to mind. Well, you could use say a class A amp for the mid frequencies where distortion is most noticeable. And also the HF - keeping a more efficient and cheaper A-B amp for the bass. -- *I like cats, too. Let's exchange recipes. Dave Plowman London SW 12 RIP Acorn |
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