This thread is about 2 channel rectifiers that have front and rear panel jacks in order to switch between the two channels.
Anyone ever notice that the red channel sounds tighter/different if you use the channel switching jack (or the manual switch) in the rear of the amp instead of the front panel jack next to the input? Does anyone know why this happens?
I looked under the hood and I noticed the front and rear panel switching jacks are wired to different places on the circuit board. Strange that these jacks are not connected in parallel and strange that they make the red channel sound slightly different.
Can anyone shed some light on this matter?
Anyone ever notice that the red channel sounds tighter/different if you use the channel switching jack (or the manual switch) in the rear of the amp instead of the front panel jack next to the input? Does anyone know why this happens?
I looked under the hood and I noticed the front and rear panel switching jacks are wired to different places on the circuit board. Strange that these jacks are not connected in parallel and strange that they make the red channel sound slightly different.
Can anyone shed some light on this matter?