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Wessel Dirksen
 
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Default Bandwidth and Frequency response

"Uptown Audio" wrote in message
...
In the case of amplifiers, it is a bit of both as the technology has
been there, so some makers may have been conservative or felt the need
to keep it reasonably useful sounding by limiting their measurement to
20khz. Another reason is that they may not have been able to measure
higher with their test gear and felt that was good enough as did the
rest of the buying public evidently. Really until speakers could
produce higher frequencies, it was (pardon the pun) mute. In the case
of modern loudspeakers, there has been a significant increase in
implementation of the materials and design to allow frequency
extension and that has definately made it more attractive for
amplifier manufacturers to either redesign their amps or simply
remeasure with more accuracy to get the higher numbers. As a case of
how both the technology has progressed and how the ability to quantify
it has diminished, Jacques Mahul of JM Lab has said of the limits of
their new beryllium tweeter that they state its response to be flat
out to 40khz, but that it could be much higher than that. That is as
high as they can measure accurately with their microphones.


Doesn't seem likely since good 1/4" measurement microphones have been able
to measure accurately to about 60kHz for many years and I'm sure Focal (the
old name for JM Lab) even in the old days had some good mic's on hand.
Sounds like marketing hype rhetoric to me . . . " Gee our new beryllium
tweeter is sooo good that we don't even know how good it is". That being
said, the inverted metalized dome from Focal was one of the forerunners in
pushing the 20kHz envelope with keeping low end frequency response in check.
A tweeters low end frequency response is more more beneficial than going
extra high!

Since about 7 years or so high frequency response has been highly marketable
mostly because of the magazines saying how "they could really hear that
extra 5kHz etc."

of amplifiers can be measured on equipment without having to use
microphones, so that is quite different. Speakers have an acoustic
output and that is what has to be measured there as it is their whole
point.
-Bill
www.uptownaudio.com
Roanoke VA
(540) 343-1250

"Chelvam" wrote in message
...
Hi all,

To the best of my knowledge, almost all amplifiers' specification

used to
state the Bandwidth to be on the average 20hz to 20khz. There were

some,
such as Chord and a number of tube/valve amplifier with rated full

power
bandwidth upto 100khz. Lately, i.e after SACD and DVD -A many

amplifer now
state bandwidth up to 100Khz.

My question, did any significant design or circuit changed to meet

the above
20khz in the last 5 years or is it mere renumbering in the specs?

The same happened in the frequency response specs. It used to be 40

or more
to 20KHz. Now all of sudden the speaker manufacturers are promoting

speakers
meeting the new formats reqirements and stating max upto 35khz and

more.
Renumbering or redesign?

Over to you guys...