question: combining components

Ingber

New member
Hi,

Before I build my Crack, I have a naive question about kit assembly in general:
A component's specs are only guaranteed within a certain range, often +/- 10% or worse.
I assume that this could potentially cause some audible channel imbalances?

If you are able to measure each component's (resistor, capacitor, tubes etc.) specs with enough precision (say 1%), would it make sense to carefully
combine components (e.g. a resistor below specs in series with another resistor above specs) to reduce channel imbalance?

If so, how would this work for the Crack kit?

Regards,
 
While you can calculate the maximum possible deviation from something like resistor tolerances, these are 1% parts and tubes themselves aren't 1% devices, so you might tighten your channel balance by a few hundredths of a dB, or possibly you could make it slightly worse.  Likewise with something like the electrolytic coupling capacitors in the Crack, you are going to be chasing tiny fractions of a dB that only appear at low frequencies, and these differences will be lower in magnitude than the differences in output between the left and the right headphone drivers themselves. 
 
Tube parameters are the most variable, typically +/-30%, ad they drift as the tube ages. So circuits are designed to work well over a range of component values.

Occasionally you can find a data sheet that goes into detail about variability and aging, typically for high-reliability or military spec tubes. An example I just checked is the Tung-Sol data sheet for a 6080WA. It shows a spec for gain (mu) of 1.5 to 2.5.

http://frank.yueksel.org/sheets/127/6/6080WA.pdf
 
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