The Law of Conservation of Ignorance: A false conclusion once arrived at & widely accepted is not easily dislodged, & the less it is understood the more tenaciously it is held.
I ran into this phenomenon at one of the consumer audio forums dedicated to magnetic field amps. I made the mistake of asking what sort of active crossovers people were using to bi-amp their systems. As it turns out, I was the only person there who was familiar with the concept of active crossovers, and I was told that a bi-amped system that used active crossovers was "unnecessarily complex" and offered "no benefits." I was promptly run out for having spoken heresy, as everyone knows that "active crossovers are NOT needed for bi-amping." [sic]
Evidently, everyone there is happily running their systems using what some people call "passive bi-amping" or "Fool's Bi-Amping," in which no active crossover is used, and both amps are sent identical full range signals, and these signals are sent to speaker arrays containing passive crossovers. <sigh>
The funny thing is that I found the Law of Conservation of Ignorance referenced at the Klipsch Forums in a bi-amping thread. I thought it was pretty funny, so I thought I'd share it here.
I ran into this phenomenon at one of the consumer audio forums dedicated to magnetic field amps. I made the mistake of asking what sort of active crossovers people were using to bi-amp their systems. As it turns out, I was the only person there who was familiar with the concept of active crossovers, and I was told that a bi-amped system that used active crossovers was "unnecessarily complex" and offered "no benefits." I was promptly run out for having spoken heresy, as everyone knows that "active crossovers are NOT needed for bi-amping." [sic]
Evidently, everyone there is happily running their systems using what some people call "passive bi-amping" or "Fool's Bi-Amping," in which no active crossover is used, and both amps are sent identical full range signals, and these signals are sent to speaker arrays containing passive crossovers. <sigh>
The funny thing is that I found the Law of Conservation of Ignorance referenced at the Klipsch Forums in a bi-amping thread. I thought it was pretty funny, so I thought I'd share it here.
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