From the manual it appears that the sub-out has a low-pass filter but no indication of what frequency it is or whether it is adjustable. Any ideas on this?
I am also wondering what frequencies do the tone controls affect.
I believe the "standards". 10 Hz for the bass and 10 kHz for the treble. There are only a few brands that I've encountered that vary from these, but it seems 95% of the manufacturers follow those frequencies for adjustments.
10 Hz? No way....
I believe the "standards". 100 Hz for the bass and 10,000 kHz for the treble. There are only a few brands that I've encountered that vary from these, but it seems 95% of the manufacturers follow those frequencies for adjustments.
Thanks for the reply, so far in the range <600€, I have noticed that Denon, NAD and Rotel do indeed go for 100/10,000KHz, Yamaha for 400/3,500KHz and Marantz for 50/15,000Hz.
I am currently undecided between the Denon PMA-600NE/800NE and the IotaVX, would include the Yamaha A-501, but the ability to quickly tone down treble at 8-10KHz in several recordings is a big plus for me.
Do you have other suggestions?
(looking to pair with the Triangle BR03, here in Europe it's 400€)
Thanks for posting the frequencies that the other brands use for their bass/treble adjustments. I did know there were some variations. I could send an email to Ian of IOTAVX and see if he'd share the frequencies that the device frequencies for bass/treble adjustment so we'd know for a fact, rather than just assuming like I've done.
But, in reality, I've strayed away from bass adjustments, treble adjustments and subwoofer pre-outs for a device. Implementing the MiniDSP 2x4 HD has resolved my issue with subwoofer integration and while I haven't used the MiniDSP for any frequency adjustments to my main, or speaker outputs, the option does exist for me. Best $205 I've spent on audio to date. I realize the MiniDSP might have some issues with the measurements, but my ears can't hear those shortcomings. It's just the device features and capabilities that makes it a win-win for me.
Updated with Onkyo/Pioneer, also 100-10,000Hz
The mini-DSP looks to be a possible solution to my needs as well. You are using it between the pre and power amp, correct?
If you would use just the Iotavx as an integrated amp, how would you use the Mini-DSP, it should be between the source and the integrated amp, does that make sense?
For me as well, one of the appeals of the IotaVX is the possible upgrade path of later on getting the PA3.
Isn't that always the case with separates? I thought any degradation, or additional noise due to interconnects, would be offset by the separation of amplification from pre amplification. However, having said that, in this case, you're still not separating the pre amp from the amp in the SA3 unit itself. Theoretically that would be cancelling out the benefits of separates. Am I missing something?
I may be a little confused . I watched the very end of Tee Jay’s part one of the Iota Stack on how to connect. To me it appears that both the SA3 and the PA3 have the same interconnects and both will be in bridge mode. The only difference I see between the SA3 and the PA3 is that the SA3 has the pre amp section in the same enclosure which may allow some noise or performance disadvantage to the PA3.
It’s all the way towards the end of the video.
Afair, you can configure both amps (SA3 and PA3) to work as mono blocks. That will give you twice the power per channel.
I'll check out the end of the video in the morning. However, I did check out the manuals at the IOTAVX web site on the SA3 and PA3. Basically, all I could come up with is how to connect the SA3 to the PA3 when one desires to use the SA3 as a preamplifer. To me, that was kind of odd, because the way I read it, you wouldn't have any additional power, but you'd just use the SA3 for the preamp and the PA3 for the amplifier. An extra $400+ to add another device, with the same wattage.
Again, I'll check out Tee-Jay's video and present the question on connectivity in the YouTube thread for clarification.
As long as you don't believe in cable sound you don't need to worry. It could even be that the external connection has lower reistance (cable) than the internal connection (thin and narrow PCB trace) - not that this would matter anyway.Correct, that is how I've understood it and in my responses above, have indicated that in doing so, you'd be running each amplifier in "bridged" mode. But, in doing so, you'd have to use on interconnect from one of the pre-out connectors on the SA3 to go to the PA3 to power that 2nd channel. This is why I brought up the question about such a connection could potentially cause an issue because both channels would't be configured in exactly the same manner, by having that one interconnect going between the SA3 --> PA3 to power the 2nd channel.
BTW, I've now been enjoying the chain RoonClient -> ToppingD50s -> JDS-Labs-Atom -> IOTAVX-PA3 for over a week and it's really fantastic in terms of bang-for-the-buck. I'm really curious to know if the PA3 will deliver in terms of measurements too.