I've done some testing and adjusting components using sine wave testing on my guitar amps. Mostly checking for clipping and crossover distortion. Are there any particular uses for square wave testing in a guitar amp that's intended to clip at appropriate locations and circumstances? Anyone use it?
One man's opinion:
As I see it, square waves are good for checking the ends of the audio response spectrum. COnsidering that the guitar amp is designed to be anything but flat, and is not concerned about anything that might be considered tweeter frequencies, and doesn't care about the real bottom, I can;t think of any time in the last 25 years I have fed square waves into a guitar amp or felt a need to.
As I see it, square waves are good for checking the ends of the audio response spectrum. COnsidering that the guitar amp is designed to be anything but flat, and is not concerned about anything that might be considered tweeter frequencies, and doesn't care about the real bottom, I can;t think of any time in the last 25 years I have fed square waves into a guitar amp or felt a need to.
Ringing on square wave tells you as much about the rise time of your sig gen as it does about the amp. Don't forget that you can introduce ringing by subtracting some ultrasonic frequencies from a perfect square wave, which the amp is supposed to do anyway unless it has infinite bandwidth.
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