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On 2016-04-13 23:29, Peter Wieck wrote:
On Wednesday, April 13, 2016 at 2:57:03 PM UTC-4, August Karlstrom wrote: How come power amplifiers for the consumer market typically never include a clip indicator? Would such a feature have a negative impact on the fidelity? -- August Many of the higher-end amps did have such indicators. But when fidelity started taking a back seat to costs, and when two-channel stereo essentially died in the consumer market, both conditions mitigated against this feature. I keep two HK amps with lead displays for power-out, right up to clipping. Dynaco, McIntosh, SAE, Phase Linear and quite a few others used either meters, LEDs, indicator lights and any of several other means to convey clipping. Until a few years ago, I also had a Dynaco ST416 with an LED display, and its older brother, the 400, had meters as an option. These days, I believe that Yamaha, Onkyo and a few others still offer this feature. Then there are more models with this feature than I thought. You sometimes read discussions about "How many watts do I need." A clip indicator is an honest way for an amplifier to say "I give up, you need a more powerful amplifier" rather than trying to camouflage the problem with technologies like soft clipping etc. If the music doesn't sound right at higher volumes, how can you tell if it's clipping or if the problem is elsewhere? -- August |
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