My guesses above were just that: guesses. So we shouldn’t assume that that’s actually what’s going on. But it sounds like a lot of owners of the OG R4 didn’t realize just how hot a Class A design can get, so Hiby adjusted it to run cooler and with less power draw.Does anyone understand this bias stuff enough to know if the bias can be ajdusted via software or is that something done through hardware?
It’s all interrelated. Class A is horribly inefficient (chews through power and generates lots of heat), but it gets its characteristic sound as a direct result of its inefficiency (constant power draw and constant temp).I wonder how much the sound change was a "discovered" affect of reducing the heat from the Class A amp, because heat is part of what makes a Class A amp sound like a Class A amp. I'm wondering if the reducing heat came first, with a result in increased battery life and sound change.