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serious voltage drop and dimming
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<blockquote data-quote="dyohn" data-source="post: 3226849" data-attributes="member: 579138"><p>Wow. There are so many things wrong with this post... hey, if you can figure out how to make electrons "slow to a crawl" then let's patent it and be the first to prove Einstein wrong, OK? We'll be ba-f**king-zillion-aires. And we can sell those high-flowing wasted energy whirlpools to the NFL. Just the thing to get sprained knees back on the field.</p><p></p><p>While you have some ideas correct (like the tendency for caps to resist voltage changes through nearly instantaneous discharging of its plates) your application knowledge is lacking. No cap can produce power: it can only serve as a very small storage device and is intended to help maintain amplifier rail voltage during a musical transient, not to sustain system power with an insufficient alternator.</p><p></p><p>"bigbangs," huh? Is this the same "bigbangs" that used to preach the gospel of caps on the12volt?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dyohn, post: 3226849, member: 579138"] Wow. There are so many things wrong with this post... hey, if you can figure out how to make electrons "slow to a crawl" then let's patent it and be the first to prove Einstein wrong, OK? We'll be ba-f**king-zillion-aires. And we can sell those high-flowing wasted energy whirlpools to the NFL. Just the thing to get sprained knees back on the field. While you have some ideas correct (like the tendency for caps to resist voltage changes through nearly instantaneous discharging of its plates) your application knowledge is lacking. No cap can produce power: it can only serve as a very small storage device and is intended to help maintain amplifier rail voltage during a musical transient, not to sustain system power with an insufficient alternator. "bigbangs," huh? Is this the same "bigbangs" that used to preach the gospel of caps on the12volt? [/QUOTE]
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