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The low down
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<blockquote data-quote="Baseline" data-source="post: 1092618" data-attributes="member: 14307"><p>It is believed that human hearing normally falls in the range of 20Hz - 20kHz. Therefore it stands to reason that most manufacturers would design and produce amplifiers capable of covering the human hearing range. What is the point of spending the extra money on research and development plus the extra cost of manufacturing which pushes the end price of the product up unnecessarily, limiting your potential market. That aside, what is the point of creating a product capable of going to 350kHz when no speaker can reproduce that and no human can hear it. As for the extra bottom end that you are hearing, it is most likely a better reproduction of the frequencies closer to the 20Hz and up that falls in your hearing range. Below 20Hz you may well "feel" but not hear.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Baseline, post: 1092618, member: 14307"] It is believed that human hearing normally falls in the range of 20Hz - 20kHz. Therefore it stands to reason that most manufacturers would design and produce amplifiers capable of covering the human hearing range. What is the point of spending the extra money on research and development plus the extra cost of manufacturing which pushes the end price of the product up unnecessarily, limiting your potential market. That aside, what is the point of creating a product capable of going to 350kHz when no speaker can reproduce that and no human can hear it. As for the extra bottom end that you are hearing, it is most likely a better reproduction of the frequencies closer to the 20Hz and up that falls in your hearing range. Below 20Hz you may well "feel" but not hear. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
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The low down
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