Re: stereo amp cleaning



In article <2Lo7i.6745$5j1.1214@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"Mark D. Zacharias" <spammenot@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Smitty Two wrote:
In article <J%f7i.62157$V75.33167@edtnps89>,
"Dave" <dspear99ca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



Has technology evolved so that a momentary crossing of speaker wires
could not destroy expensive output transistors?

It hasn't as much to do with technological evolution as it has to do
with intelligent design. Hasn't there always been good stuff and bad
stuff? A good design would allow you to hard wire the speaker leads
together and go fishing.

Sorry. From a technical standpoint, that is an idiotic statement, one that
has been made before, and disproven time and again. People like to make
statements like "This amp will drive a nail!" etc but it simply isn't true.
It is the nature of bipolar transistors, in fact any semiconductor, that
they cannot carry current much beyond their rating for more than a
split-second. The instantaneous current demanded by a short-circuit will
destroy ANY semiconductor output device unless that device is being so
limited that it cannot produce music, which is dynamic in nature. Any
protection circuit is there simply to protect the speakers from an amp
failure, and to protect the amp only if the overload isn't too severe. This
presumes that the sensing circuit will sense a large (but not TOO large)
current surge prior to total failure. Any circuit which would really protect
the amp from a short circuit would also protect it from the music.


Mark Z.

I stand corrected. Maybe my ignorance is the reason I'm still listening
to tubes.
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: stereo amp cleaning
    ... Any protection circuit is there ... simply to protect the speakers from an amp failure, ... I was going to mention tubes but I'd already gone on too long... ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: stereo amp cleaning
    ... A good design would allow you to hard wire the speaker leads ... Any protection circuit is there ... simply to protect the speakers from an amp failure, ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: stereo amp cleaning
    ... A good design would allow you to hard wire the speaker leads ... protection circuit is there simply to protect the speakers from an amp ... and to protect the amp only if the overload isn't too severe. ... presumes that the sensing circuit will sense a large ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: stereo amp cleaning
    ... could not destroy expensive output transistors? ... protection circuit is there simply to protect the speakers from an amp ... and to protect the amp only if the overload isn't too severe. ... presumes that the sensing circuit will sense a large ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Re: WAN Ethernet
    ... the rates customers pay for protected circuits are based on the premise that both paths are dedicated to that circuit. ... If the telco is using the protect path for someone else's unprotected circuit, they effectively get to sell the same bandwidth twice. ... I can get the same SLA on an unprotected circuit as a protected one. ... The sales people don't care, and management doesn't either; they price their circuits with the assumption they'll have to pay the maximum credit, and if they don't it's just extra profit. ...
    (comp.dcom.lans.ethernet)

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