Great lengths

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Before I get started I wanted to mention there are a few slots still open for LANRover beta testers. Go here to sign up. It will only be available in the US. Shipping commences this week. We go to great lengths to get our music systems to sound right. Often, extraordinary lengths. The wondrous results we sometimes achieve are worth the quest. But despite our efforts, they don't always pan out. I remember some years back when I was interested in delaying the sound of a subwoofer a few milliseconds. Physically moving the sub to a far location delays sounds arrival, but often the room's too small for a meaningful delay. It would have been nice to leave the sub where it sat and adjust a small amount of time delay instead. It seemed like a simple task, yet it wasn't. The first decision one would have to make is how to delay sound. There aren't many means to do so while keeping it analog. Had I been willing to convert the signal to digital the task becomes trivial, but I was focused on pure and keeping it in its original form. I discovered a device called a bucket brigade that would do the job. A bucket brigade works as its name implies. A small slice of the analog signal is captured and passed from handler to handler until it is dumped at the output. Each hand off of the voltage slice takes time to move and, if you have enough buckets to move the signal along, it delays its arrival. More buckets, more delay. It seemed a clever enough device and we gave it a try. Ugh. Even though frequencies were quite low, slicing and dicing the analog signal and then trying to reassemble it never worked out. In fact, we eventually resorted to going digital, and that proved to be fine. Sometimes we go to great lengths to maintain purity, but they don't always give us the results we had hoped for.
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Paul McGowan

Founder & CEO

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