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Clipping light on bass knob accuracy?
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<blockquote data-quote="metalheadjoe" data-source="post: 8782385" data-attributes="member: 581422"><p>I don't remember what I used as a source. Why is that important?</p><p></p><p>Voltage at the clip light is the only voltage that matters, and even that is of digital importance. Voltage at the speaker terminals has no relevance to clipping in a general sense.</p><p></p><p>Your experience that you described did not mention watching the waveform and the oscope display at the same time. You said you compared voltage one time to voltage at a different time.</p><p></p><p>Correct, no two circuits are identical. THAT'S WHY MY FIRST SUGGESTION WAS FOR OP TO TEST THE ACCURACY OF HIS CLIP LIGHT BY HIMSELF SO HE WOULD KNOW ITS ACCURACY!</p><p></p><p>Your engineering technique would be relevant if you engineered OP's amp.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="metalheadjoe, post: 8782385, member: 581422"] I don't remember what I used as a source. Why is that important? Voltage at the clip light is the only voltage that matters, and even that is of digital importance. Voltage at the speaker terminals has no relevance to clipping in a general sense. Your experience that you described did not mention watching the waveform and the oscope display at the same time. You said you compared voltage one time to voltage at a different time. Correct, no two circuits are identical. THAT'S WHY MY FIRST SUGGESTION WAS FOR OP TO TEST THE ACCURACY OF HIS CLIP LIGHT BY HIMSELF SO HE WOULD KNOW ITS ACCURACY! Your engineering technique would be relevant if you engineered OP's amp. [/QUOTE]
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Clipping light on bass knob accuracy?
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