Stereo / Mono / Distributed Systems: Difference between revisions
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How much gain do you get when you run two L1® with the same source. | How much gain do you get when you run two L1® with the same source. | ||
This is an excerpt from a recent post from Ken-at-Bose. He will be updating this soon. | <!--This is an excerpt from a recent post from Ken-at-Bose. He will be updating this soon. --> | ||
:The most you can ever ever get from putting two sources fed by the same signal together is 6 dB. The reason? sound waves add in space through the principle of superposition. If the waves from two sources perfectly add, you get twice the amplitude, which is 6 dB. Now, I've been proven wrong on a number of occasions, but if that happens on this occasion, Alan, the sound engineer you've been talking to is going to get a Nobel Prize. | :The most you can ever ever get from putting two sources fed by the same signal together is 6 dB. The reason? sound waves add in space through the principle of superposition. If the waves from two sources perfectly add, you get twice the amplitude, which is 6 dB. Now, I've been proven wrong on a number of occasions, but if that happens on this occasion, Alan, the sound engineer you've been talking to is going to get a Nobel Prize. | ||