why amplifier is necessary to be used with bass tube,is it necessary or not
akarshit37:
Aulto ko utha kar kachre ke dibbe me daal do or sellenser me petrol daal kar dhakkan lga do
Answers
Answered by
2
It depends. If you have RCA inputs on the bass tube than most likely it has an amplifier on it. how ever if it just has speaker wire input terminal than you will need an amp.
Answered by
3
You're asking a subjective question; it is one that can only be answered by plugging in a few tube-based headphone amps next to your favorite solid-state headphone amps and deciding for yourself which you prefer.
As some other folks here have suggested, you might be surprised by what you hear. I conducted a microphone shootout recently in which the lone solid-state mic outclassed several higher-cost, tube-based designs. It sounded "warmer" and "richer" and all the sonic adjectives normally associated with tube gear.
I happened across an interesting take on WHY tubes sound different than solid-state devices in an interview with Groove Tubes founder Aspen Pittman recently. It concludes,
"Now you’ve got the clue to the difference between transistor and
tube. It is a very noticeable dynamic difference between the two, but it
is much more difficult to measure these differences. Transistors are
loaded with dynamic distortion. If you’ve ever pushed a guitar amp up to
its edge, you’ve heard the dynamic limitations of a transistor, whereas
if you push a tube up to it, you’re going to hear THD but dynamically
it still sounds and feels pretty good. This is because tubes have almost
no dynamic distortion and transistors have loads, but nobody talks
about that difference because it has only been through recent advances
in measurement tools that we could learn this."
As some other folks here have suggested, you might be surprised by what you hear. I conducted a microphone shootout recently in which the lone solid-state mic outclassed several higher-cost, tube-based designs. It sounded "warmer" and "richer" and all the sonic adjectives normally associated with tube gear.
I happened across an interesting take on WHY tubes sound different than solid-state devices in an interview with Groove Tubes founder Aspen Pittman recently. It concludes,
"Now you’ve got the clue to the difference between transistor and
tube. It is a very noticeable dynamic difference between the two, but it
is much more difficult to measure these differences. Transistors are
loaded with dynamic distortion. If you’ve ever pushed a guitar amp up to
its edge, you’ve heard the dynamic limitations of a transistor, whereas
if you push a tube up to it, you’re going to hear THD but dynamically
it still sounds and feels pretty good. This is because tubes have almost
no dynamic distortion and transistors have loads, but nobody talks
about that difference because it has only been through recent advances
in measurement tools that we could learn this."
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