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Old December 13th 14, 08:58 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Phil Allison[_3_]
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Posts: 312
Default Centre, speaker - twin drivers, use one enclosure or two separateenclosures side by side?


Jim Lesurf wrote:


The whole thing is a nonsense.


Damping Factor made more sense back in the days when power amps were
valve and almost all of them had high output impedances. But even then it
was a weird term given the details. e.g. Amps having an output impedance
that varies with frequency, level, etc, and generally *not* being
resistive. And speakers also being nothing much like a resistor. Alas we
seem stuck with the term.



** Damping factor has been relegated to a non issue with hi-fi amplifiers for many decades - despite which it still looms large in the minds of most audiophools. Bull**** baffles brains and good marketing gimmicks never die.

In another area of amplifier design, damping factors vary enormously from one model to another and yet rates no mention in advertising at all.

I am speaking of guitar amps, where the effective DF may be anything from 100 to 0.1 or lower - making for very audible differences.

Famous valve amps like Marshall and Fender have DFs of about 1 due to use of modest amounts of NFB. Early VOX amplifiers were class A and used no NFB at all resulting if very low DF numbers like 0.1. When VOX released their first SS models, the DF was even lower than the valve ones - due to using a combination of voltage and current feedback.

The same idea is still used in lot of modern SS guitar amps to get DFs of between 0.3 and 2, so mimicking the tonal character of popular valve models.

But makers keep it all a big secret.

How very odd.


..... Phil