| THD has a price, and a negative one! - Click HERE for Original Thread |
| weissi |
| that has to sound awful :rolleyes: |
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| cpemma |
| quote: | Originally posted by weissi
that has to sound awful :rolleyes: |
Blind testing against the euro should be the judge of that. |
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| IVX |
| Ha-ha, funny mistake, though it's typical manager_based error. About year ago i've found mistake on the Murata site ( http://www.murata.com/cap/index.html ) "Cross Refarence", yeah it's not so funny like THD=-90$, but i already sent them two letter about it (right product should be present on the right site etc), and still no reactions, it seems Murata really mean the "Refarence".:) |
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| janneman |
This weekend I just sent an email to ADI because in one of their new chip data sheets they say: "5V, 250A dual opamp". I told them I thought that 250A was pretty optimistic. Within 10 minutes I had a reply saying they realised they would have a hard time to convince me...
Engineers are just like people.
Jan Didden |
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| Pjotr |
Hèh hèh, that price is negative. Does that mean you get money from the vendor purchasing such an amp? The smaller the distortion the more money you get?
:wiz: |
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| lineup |
| quote: | Originally posted by Pjotr
Hèh hèh, that price is negative.
Does that mean you get money from the vendor
purchasing such an amp?
The smaller the distortion ---> the more money you get?
:wiz: |
:clown:
good one! Pjotr |
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| Christer |
| Not electronics, but strange errors appear everywhere since we allowed computers to mess around. :) |
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| Gyula |
| If you measure +1 dB THD at purchase, you get 90 USD. Your gain is 90 USD*THD[dB]. If you measure a negative value, you should to pay for the chip. The price is an additional charge for the final deal. |
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