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Amplifiers
Voltage Input Sensitivity
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<blockquote data-quote="thch" data-source="post: 1519866" data-attributes="member: 562032"><p>depends on the type of input to the amp. in all likelyhood it will just clip, but i've seen much worse. the best was inverted clipping where the output increases to the point of clipping. the input kept increaseing, and at some point the output clipped, but the wrong way. basically it made a square wave at twice the frequency of the input. very ugly. this is very unlikely to happen unless you took the output of another amp and pluged it into the RCA inputs. of course at some point you destroy the amp... you'd probably need peak voltages over 15V to do this though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="thch, post: 1519866, member: 562032"] depends on the type of input to the amp. in all likelyhood it will just clip, but i've seen much worse. the best was inverted clipping where the output increases to the point of clipping. the input kept increaseing, and at some point the output clipped, but the wrong way. basically it made a square wave at twice the frequency of the input. very ugly. this is very unlikely to happen unless you took the output of another amp and pluged it into the RCA inputs. of course at some point you destroy the amp... you'd probably need peak voltages over 15V to do this though. [/QUOTE]
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Voltage Input Sensitivity
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