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#1 | |
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Vancouver
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Huh? Is this snakeoil or not? From their website:
http://www.edgeamp.com/technology.html Quote:
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#2 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Luleå
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Sounds like BS to me ....
Why should an optimal stable bias result in a tenfold increase in gain? Im assuming they are talking about Vbias for the output stage .. /Dave
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Friskt kopplat hälften brunnet ... |
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#3 |
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The one and only
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Sounds like they are using an optical isolator to adjust bias.
I refer you to my patent pages at www.passlabs.com |
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#4 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Kungsbacka on the Swedish westcoast
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Vactrols are among the parts You always have to replace in old guitarramps. 630 nM is visible red light so it seems to be just what mr Pass says, an ldr.
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Ingvar |
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#5 |
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diyAudio Member
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i live in boulder, and have talked with the guys from edge... they say its really more wow factor than anything, but basically, a laser is fixed on an open transistor, and it changes the characteristics of it. supposedly the actual power transistors are NOT being laser-baised.
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#6 |
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diyAudio Member
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this "Laser Optical Bias Circuitry" ment to confuse regular people that know nothing in electronics so they will think its doing something usefull because its "laser" wow !! cool
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#7 |
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Account Disabled
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Vancouver
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That's what I thought, too.
On the other hand, reviewers seem to like them, even at the 75 grand price (or because of it It's the sort of stuff that makes me think of blind tests again
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#8 |
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diyAudio Member
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they do something. im not good enough with electronics to know the explaination of that they did, but it does do something. it changes the properties of the transistors, thats all i know.
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#9 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Left Coast
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Here's a guess. If they aim a laser at a transistor, the transistor is going to be warmer than it would be if no laser were aimed at it. If the intensity of the laser depends on a voltage (but which voltage??), then by manipulating the the temperature of the transistor they are are manuipulatiing the conductance. So I supose it could indeed be a way of controlling the bias. Perhaps it gets you better (i.e., quicker) thermal tracking than the various schemes involving mounting the Vbe multiplier on output devices, heat sinks or what not.
Clever, but are more mundane schemes really so lacking that this makes a difference? |
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#10 |
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diyAudio Member
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When light is applied to a reverse biased PN diode juction, leakage current increases [the more light applied, the more leakage current]
The same happens for C-B junctions of NPN and PNP transistors : When light is applied to the juction, its leakage current increases and thus base current and colector current increase All bipolar transistors and diodes are subject to this light-dependent leakage phenomena, but obviously, all devices except phototransistors come into an opaque case that doesn't allow external light to reach the junctions Also, an optocoupler is nothing but a LED diode and a bipolar transistor placed in the same case in such a manner that LED light is allowed to reach the junction of the transistor So at the end, all that laser ******** may be nothing but an exotic optocoupler. Also, optocouplers doesn't work at light-speed since bipolar transistors and LED diodes are much slower [see datasheets] |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Close to the Edge | PeteMcK | Multi-Way | 15 | 13th July 2005 10:54 PM |
| Diffract.exe is no more, try the edge! | Svante | Multi-Way | 69 | 11th May 2005 05:04 AM |
| Help with edge.exe | Dave Jones | Multi-Way | 2 | 21st May 2004 11:38 PM |
| Edge connectors - which to use? | andyjevans | Tubes / Valves | 4 | 8th January 2004 09:38 AM |
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