D
Dennis Murphy
Audioholic General
This is in response to a couple of statements in Speedskater's post. The most recent revisions of the Rule did not, in fact, eliminate the power bandwidth requirement, which is usually interpreted to mean 20 Hz - 20 kHz. It might seem that way given all the 1 kHz specs that are floating around, but what the original and current Rule actually requires is that manufacturers state which bandwidth applies, and give power and distortion specs over that bandwidth. A rating over 40 Hz - 15 kHz complies with the Rule. Does a rating at 1 kHz comply with the Rule? Is one frequency a "bandwidth"? It's not within the spirit of the Rule, but technically it might be. That issue has never been tested. In any event, the Rule does not explicitly allow the principal power spec to be stated at only 1 kHz. Also, the revisions did not eliminate the required distortion disclosure. Nothing was changed in that department. All I tried to do in the revisions was to get rid of the dreaded 1/3 power preconditioning requirement and make the rule applicable in a sensible way to closed systems like powered subwoofers. Finally, although I'm sure the FTC would like to see its budget doubled, it has done fairly well in the budget department. My comment about lack of resources and expertise went narrowly to enforcement of the Amplifier Rule. It's not a high priority, and given how well the Hi Fidelity industry works in general and the multitude of problems consumers face in arguably more important areas, I'm not sure it should be a high priority. But hopefully some attention can be drawn to the most blatant Rule violations Gene has helpfully pointed out.
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