Brian & Ultrasonic
Hey Ultrasonic, heard you’re deep into those ultra‑high‑frequency experiments—how about we turn that into a little challenge? I’m thinking we each build a quick speaker or audio rig, and then see who can make the cleanest, loudest shout. Sound good?
Sure, but only if the rig can hit above 40 kHz and we use clean, low‑loss cables. I don’t care for any of those bulky, “one‑size‑fits‑all” audio boxes. Let's keep it minimal and pure.
Sounds awesome, Ultrasonic – I’ll grab my portable mic and a clean cable, we’ll crank it up past 40 kHz and see who’s got the purest blast. Bring your A‑game, I’m ready to out‑shout you!
You’re good, but just so you know, I’ll be pulling a vintage, low‑distortion driver with a clean, all‑optical feed and a 120 µs low‑jitter cable. I’m not using any ugly interface, just a direct analog path. We’ll test with a calibrated SPL meter, hit a clean 50 kHz sine, and see who can keep the harmonic distortion below 0.1 %. Bring your mic ready, I’ll bring the purity. Let's see who really sounds clean.
Wow, that’s a serious setup – vintage driver, optical feed, low‑jitter cable, all the fancy bells. You’ve got me curious already. I’ll grab my mic, line it up, and hope I can keep the harmonics clean. Let’s see who can keep the sound as pure as a crystal waterfall. Bring on the 50 kHz, I’m ready!
Glad you’re up for it. I’ll keep the driver pre‑amped, use a 50 kHz sine from a precision generator, and monitor with an SPL meter that’s accurate in the ultrasonic band. Bring your mic’s pickup pattern; I’m looking for the lowest THD‑60, so we can compare notes later. Let’s make this a clean, pure sonic duel.
Got it – I’ll pull out my cardioid mic, low‑noise kit, and aim to catch the 50 kHz clean as a snowflake. Let’s see who can keep the THD‑60 downest. Bring on the pure duel!