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At 08:37 AM 7/29/2002, Mark Sottilaro wrote: >I will experiment with that tonight. I am sure I probably don't hear up >around 19K so well, but I do have pretty good hearing for an old guy. >I've got the gain at 12, and I thought I was getting a healthy signal >into >the EDP. the problem would be a signal that was too healthy overloading the input and engaging the limiter. That can also have a low-pass effect. You may need to turn the input volume knob down a bit if that is the problem. >More importantly than range, how flat is the overall response? I know >most gear can be pretty flat these days. I don't remember the exact specs, but the digital path has a pretty typical flat response that all digital gear has. I believe the passband ripple is 0/-.2dB. The low-end rolloff point is well below 20hz. Between there and 19khz it would be flat within 0/-3db. But if you pull in a bit from the ends, it would be flat within 0/-.2dB (probably from 20Hz - 16Khz it would be flat within 0/-.2dB, but that's a guess because it has been a long time since I measured it.) like Bret said, if you have the gains set up right, you shouldn't hear any frequency problems. kim >On Monday, July 29, 2002, at 02:43 AM, Kim Flint wrote: > >>At 12:28 AM 7/29/2002, Mark Sottilaro wrote: >> >>>On Sunday, July 28, 2002, at 10:00 PM, Bret wrote: >>>>Specifically what aspect of the fidelity of the EDP is inferior to the >>>>repeater, for example signal to noise, frequency response, harmonic >>>>distortion, intermodulation distorion, hum, etc? >>> >>>seems to be a frequency response issue. The high frequencies are >truncated. >> >>according to an audio precision meter, the -3db point should be about >>19kHz if the gains are set correctly. ______________________________________________________________________ Kim Flint | Looper's Delight kflint@loopers-delight.com | http://www.loopers-delight.com