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In the Forum: Playback Listening
In the Thread: The open project: a lateral cross-injection.
Post Subject: Easier on the driversPosted by zztop7 on: 3/31/2013
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Paul S wrote:"typical "stereo" L and R separation is mostly an engineering hodge-podge".    I do not disagree with that statement.  I do feel the major advantage of stereo is not "stereo", but the separation of parts of the information in the signal to the drivers.  Therefore, less information is dumped on each driver.  If a driver has 50 pieces of info. to handle in a given time vs. 100; the 50 pieces should be handled more cleanly and accurately.  So the analogy would be MONO= 2 drivers each handling the same 100 pieces ///  STEREO = 2 drivers each handling 50 pieces of the total signal of 100.  [I do know there is varying degrees of overlap, and 50/50 is not a perfect real world scenario.]   So much of Romy's research & work has been based on dividing up the signal to where it belongs.  Each driver only doing its' specialized area with the correct pieces of info.     Contributors please correct anything wrong in the above statement.  Best to all,  zz

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