Hi again,Bypassing the power supply electrolytic capacitor with a small poly capacitor will not solve the sonic problems
of a truly high fidelity audio amplifier, especially as the frequency drops through the audio range to low frequencies.
That is just one of the reasons why a solid state amplifier will never be perceptually perfectly accurate, no matter
what others assume.
cheers
pos
I am aware of the low frequency issues I stated that a couple times now I think, but I do have a couple questions for you here.
1. What do you mean by "perceptually perfectly accurate", how do we measure that?
I ask because it sounds like a catch 22 statement where we are mixing "perfectly accurate" with some sort of "perception", which I do not think mix very well. It sounds like "illusory perception" to me which I had mentioned a little before this. If you are setting some sort of standard (perfectly reasonable to do) then you really have to set it with a qualitative measurement of some sort.
I run into this when talking about the effect of premium gas on a combustion engine automobile with people from various walks of life. This could be different though so I'd like to hear about your take on this.
2. Why are you saying that a solid state amplifier will never achieve this assumed (for now) goal. Is there another type of amplifier that can reach your intended goal?
I ask this now because we know that feedback is a marvelous invention when used for correcting all sorts of errors.