Iron_Dreamer Posted March 24, 2006 Report Posted March 24, 2006 I got to thinking, that my source outputs PLENTY of voltage, so I could possibly get by with a headphone amp in unity gain, only suppling additional current. Is it possible to properly operate the dynahi this way? I am aware of how to change the gain, and fortunately dgardner socketed the gain resistor for me. My understanding of gain tells me that this resistor would essentially be bypassed to run unity gain, correct? The unusual nature of that setup is what made me wonder if it were possible. Certainly I could stick in a 100ohm resistor to get to a gain of 2, right? At any rate, is there any point to this? I figured that lower gain would equal less noise, since the voltage is already high enough coming out of the source.
Iron_Dreamer Posted March 25, 2006 Author Report Posted March 25, 2006 Nevermind, got my answer on headwize
Iron_Dreamer Posted March 26, 2006 Author Report Posted March 26, 2006 Essentially that the dynahi is made to work at a fairly high gain, and lowering it reduces stability and bandwidth. Unity gain is a BAD idea.
Quince Posted July 4, 2006 Report Posted July 4, 2006 Too bad? You shouldn't be using an amp, you should be using a buffer if you don't need gain. The dynahigh specifically has a number of stages to achieve high gain.
kevin gilmore Posted July 6, 2006 Report Posted July 6, 2006 As far as amplifiers go the voltage gain is far lower than other amplifiers of this type. Its the amount of power output that is significantly higher than all other amplifiers designed for headphones. The amount of class A current that can be delivered was designed for dificult loads such as k1000's and qualia's. The signal to noise ratio is way up there too, so while you could use this thing with earbuds, it would be a real bad idea to do so. I'm sure with some very minimal resistor changes i could get it unity gain stable if i wanted to. At a voltage gain of 2 (6db) it is not going to add any detectable noise to any signal.
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