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  2. Carvin Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carvin_Corporation

    Carvin's Legacy 3 amplifier above a speaker cabinet with Ibanez JEM guitar, used by Steve Vai 1984 Carvin X60 Amp. Founded by Lowel C Kiesel as the L.C. Kiesel Company, in 1946 in San Diego, California. [4] The company's first self-manufactured items were guitar pickups, which were wound using an old sewing machine. [5]

  3. Bob Carver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Carver

    Bob Carver used "distortion pots" to introduce amplifier characteristics, fine-tuned to null-out any sound differences. His modified amplifier sound was so similar, Stereophile Magazine editors could not tell the difference between his amplifier and one costing more than $6,000. [5] This amplifier was marketed as the M1.0t for about $400.00.

  4. Category:Audio amplifier manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Audio_amplifier...

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  5. Category:Guitar amplifier manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Guitar_amplifier...

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  6. Audio power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_power

    For most audio applications more power is needed at low frequencies. This requires a high-power amplifier for low frequencies (e.g., 200 watts for 20–200 Hz band), lower power amplifier for the midrange (e.g., 50 watts for 200 to 1000 Hz), and even less the high end (e.g. 5 watts for 1000–20000 Hz).

  7. Bass amplifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_amplifier

    Doubling the power of an amplifier results in a "just noticeable" increase in volume, so a 100-watt amplifier is only slightly louder than a 50-watt amplifier. In addition is the human ear's tendency to behave as a natural audio compressor at high volumes.