Thermioniclife
Member
Holy smokes, take a chill pill, smoke a bowl or have a drink and relax.
Thermioniclife said:Holy smokes, take a chill pill, smoke a bowl or have a drink and relax.
Paul Birkeland said:What's the channel balance of your source?
XforceVesa2 said:I use as a Source the iFi Micro iDSD Black Label. The Crackatwoa is directly connected with the RCA LineOut from the iFi(the switch on the iFi for the LineOut is set to "Direct"(it's basically a passthrough) so that the Volume control from the iFi doesn't interfere with the RCA LineOut.
I've got the Following measurements directly from the RCA Output from the iFi:
L = 1,434V
R = 1,463V
So an imbalance of about 0,2dB
The strange thing here is that it seems like that the right side is louder than the Left side before it goes trough the amp. It's like that the channel in the amp gets inverted?
Thermioniclife said:Ditto! or relax and enjoy. Or buy 0.1% tolerance passive parts and stress about something else about your life.
You have stated that your source has an imbalance so get real!
XforceVesa2 said:Does the L and R channel get inverted as it goes trough the Amp?
Deke609 said:Just to clarify, I think you are asking whether the amp swaps left and right signals - i.e., whether the left input signal appears on the right output rca jack, and vice versa? I assume you mean this because you've measured the channel imbalance of your source and found that it is opposite to the imbalance coming out of your C2A, and so your hypothesis is that the amp swaps left and right signals, thereby passing on the imbalance of your source. Do I have that correctly?
(I ask the above clarifying questions b/c in audio-speak the term "inverted" often refers to phase inversion - i.e., if you imagine a sine wave signal with a positive peak at time 1 and a negative peak at time 2, the inverted version of that sine wave would be flipped 180 degrees: a negative peak at time 1 and a positive peak at time 2. I don't think you are asking about phase inversion -- but please correct me if I am wrong).
Re whether left and right signals are swapped: I'm pretty sure that none of BH's amps swap left and right signals b/c (a) that would significantly change the presentation of music (e.g., horns that should be on the left are instead on the right), and (b) I can't imagine any circuit design reason/benefit to swapping signal sides. I think the only way for the signals to get swapped is by user/builder wiring error - my guess would be at the attenuators. So you might want to double-check your signal wiring.
cheers, Derek
XforceVesa2 said:I've got the Following measurements directly from the RCA Output from the iFi:
L = 1,434V
R = 1,463V
So an imbalance of about 0,2dB
The strange thing here is that it seems like that the right side is louder than the Left side before it goes trough the amp.
Deke609 said:Further to PB's point, I think you found the probable explanation some time ago:
So it looks like the IFI imbalance and the C2A imbalance partially cancelled out.
It would be an interesting experiment to trace the signal balance through the C2A to see where the imbalance pops up. You've already done some of that by testing the voltages that come out of the attenuator. You got 1.06V out of one side, and 1.08V out of the other. I don't know anything about decibel calculations, but using the following equation I found online, dB difference = 20*log(V1/V2), suggests this you've got a 0.16dB difference. If this calculation is correct, that's part of your answer. PB could probably figure out (or maybe you could) what value of resistor to add in series or parallel at the attenuator to get closer to a zero difference between channels. I don't have a Two-Quiet, so I can't be of any help here.
This is all kind of academic since your hearing test results suggest you won't be able to hear the channel imbalance in any event, but it could be a fun thing to track down and solve.
cheers, Derek
You're the only one...XforceVesa2 said:Just out of Curiosity what Channel Balance does the other Crack and C2A users on this Forum measure on their Headphone Jack?![]()
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