You will always find people who recommend some alternative way to do most anything, but for all the many people who want to use crossover distortion, I really think there is a much larger group who prefer to do it the way the factory provided, with the test points.
Note also that that 40Hz thing asks you to adjust for minimum harmonic distortion. Crossover is certainly one distortion but not all. The balance control essentially centers the phase inverter within its range, so they are looking not at crossover so much as they are looking to make waveforms symmetrical. Note that is not the same as setting the bias. The procedure expects you to use a distortion meter.
You could have a way unbalanced phase inverter but no crossover distortion, and likeaise you could have a perfectly balanced PI but tons of crossover.
That 40Hz procedure says crank it to 25vRMS into the load. At 4 ohms I get a little under 160 watts.
Note also that that 40Hz thing asks you to adjust for minimum harmonic distortion. Crossover is certainly one distortion but not all. The balance control essentially centers the phase inverter within its range, so they are looking not at crossover so much as they are looking to make waveforms symmetrical. Note that is not the same as setting the bias. The procedure expects you to use a distortion meter.
You could have a way unbalanced phase inverter but no crossover distortion, and likeaise you could have a perfectly balanced PI but tons of crossover.
That 40Hz procedure says crank it to 25vRMS into the load. At 4 ohms I get a little under 160 watts.
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