Some of the first comments I read were truly lacking in even basic understanding.
First, the Pyle is not state of the art as stated. +/- 2db 20-20khz affects the sound
from bass Through highs, Not just the bass and highs.
Second, there are electrolytic capacitors in the power supply filtering circuit,
with dielectric absorption (DA) of ~7%. the DA of poly capacitors is ~ 0,02%.
Even a layman understands degrading some 7% of the music signal (frequency dependent)
is quite poor, so hardly audiophile/state of the art quality. And the decoupling capacitor is
in the direct circuit path.
By the way, +/- 0,1db from 20-20khz is an approximate signal deviation change of -54db from the
fundamental.
+/-2db is an approximate change of -22db give or take. That is horrible.
The human ear has the potential of perceiving to -132db, extremely more sensitive.
You, the reader, can guess the quality of the phono stage.
HD of virtually any amplifier (except SETs) is overtaken by the speaker distortions. Virtually
all individuals utilize about 1 watt from an amplifier. 0.05% distortion from a tube amplifier
just is not noticeable. Peaks of several watts can be (esp. SET amps) but speaker distortions
are greater.
So 0,0001% means nothing. In fact, global negative feedback in solid state amplifiers is a problem
because it takes a finite time for the musical signal to "travel" between input to output and back to
the input. Thus the signal is always affected, even if above some 20khz. That has been proven several
times in studies.
By the way, anything solid state cannot be made to be perceptually perfectly accurate/natural,
for many reasons, while vacuum tubes, using the right types, can be designed to be perceptually
perfectly accurate/natural, especially small signal such as preamplifiers with gain etc. But even tube
amplifiers, through specialized listening tests (not the scam dbt/abx tests being propagated on
audio forums for marketing purposes.)
For those reading these posts, please be very careful what you believe as the mis-representation
and misinformation is truly astounding. It is quite evident why truly accurate analog audio is
slowly becoming extinct. (ps. I do agree that super expensive components are just that, super
expensive and does Not produce accurate sound.) I shall not respond anymore on this string.
Cheers
pos
First, the Pyle is not state of the art as stated. +/- 2db 20-20khz affects the sound
from bass Through highs, Not just the bass and highs.
Second, there are electrolytic capacitors in the power supply filtering circuit,
with dielectric absorption (DA) of ~7%. the DA of poly capacitors is ~ 0,02%.
Even a layman understands degrading some 7% of the music signal (frequency dependent)
is quite poor, so hardly audiophile/state of the art quality. And the decoupling capacitor is
in the direct circuit path.
By the way, +/- 0,1db from 20-20khz is an approximate signal deviation change of -54db from the
fundamental.
+/-2db is an approximate change of -22db give or take. That is horrible.
The human ear has the potential of perceiving to -132db, extremely more sensitive.
You, the reader, can guess the quality of the phono stage.
HD of virtually any amplifier (except SETs) is overtaken by the speaker distortions. Virtually
all individuals utilize about 1 watt from an amplifier. 0.05% distortion from a tube amplifier
just is not noticeable. Peaks of several watts can be (esp. SET amps) but speaker distortions
are greater.
So 0,0001% means nothing. In fact, global negative feedback in solid state amplifiers is a problem
because it takes a finite time for the musical signal to "travel" between input to output and back to
the input. Thus the signal is always affected, even if above some 20khz. That has been proven several
times in studies.
By the way, anything solid state cannot be made to be perceptually perfectly accurate/natural,
for many reasons, while vacuum tubes, using the right types, can be designed to be perceptually
perfectly accurate/natural, especially small signal such as preamplifiers with gain etc. But even tube
amplifiers, through specialized listening tests (not the scam dbt/abx tests being propagated on
audio forums for marketing purposes.)
For those reading these posts, please be very careful what you believe as the mis-representation
and misinformation is truly astounding. It is quite evident why truly accurate analog audio is
slowly becoming extinct. (ps. I do agree that super expensive components are just that, super
expensive and does Not produce accurate sound.) I shall not respond anymore on this string.
Cheers
pos
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