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Definitions for
"Crossover distortion"
Keywords:
distortion
,
amplifier
,
cutoff
,
biasing
,
smoothly
Related Terms:
Distortion
,
Passive crossover
,
Clipping
,
Noise
,
Squelch
,
Bi-amping
,
Active crossover
,
Noise gate
,
Attenuate
,
Crossover
,
Audio amplifier
,
Intermodulation distortion
,
Hum
,
Noise floor
,
Feedback
,
Crossover network
,
Impulse noise
,
Electrical noise
,
Driver
,
Pad
,
Background noise
,
Compressor
,
Harmonic distortion
,
Woofer
,
System noise
,
Pumping
,
Thd
,
Ringing
,
Processor
,
Bi-wiring
,
Phase distortion
,
Midrange driver
,
Imd
,
Total harmonic distortion
,
Headroom
,
Thermal noise
,
Gate
,
Expander
,
Mixer
,
Attenuator
,
Signal to noise ratio
,
Pre-amp
,
Noise level
,
Crosstalk
,
Flat response
,
Speaker level
,
Ambient noise
,
Random noise
,
Tweeter
,
Signal-to-noise ratio
Distortion caused by class B transistor biasing. It occurs when both transistors are in cutoff.
robotics101.net
Distortion caused by a slight delay in amplification at the crossing-over point between the top and bottom devices in a push-pull amplifier circuit.
instrument-musical.com
Distortion caused by both devices in a class B amplifier being cut-off at the same time.
twysted-pair.com
A type of distortion that can occur in an audio amplifier when a signal does not smoothly swing from positive to negative or vice versa as it is passed (switched) from one output device to another.
soundandvisionmag.com
Crossover distortion is a type of distortion which occurs in complementary, or "push-pull", Class-B amplifier stages.
en.wikipedia.org
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Keywords:
stick
,
platform
Cross Platform Cross Stick
sweetwater.com