Monday, March 9, 2026

Software Defined Radio (SDR): A Complete Practical Guide to I/Q Sampling, Portable SDR Receivers, Antennas, and Real-World Shortwave Listening

Published by IWISTAO

A comprehensive guide covering what SDR is, how it works, why I/Q sampling matters, how the Malahit DSP SDR V3 fits into modern radio listening, and how to choose the right antenna for better shortwave reception.


Figure 1. A modern SDR receiver displays a live spectrum and waterfall, making radio signals visible as well as audible.

Contents

  1. What Is a Software Defined Radio?
  2. Why SDR Is Different from Traditional Radios
  3. The Core Technology: I/Q (Quadrature Sampling)
  4. Typical SDR Signal Processing Chain
  5. The Malahit DSP SDR V3 Portable Receiver
  6. Inside the Malahit SDR Architecture
  7. What Signals Can SDR Receivers Receive?
  8. Active Antenna Amplifiers
  9. Best Antennas for Shortwave Reception
  10. Why MLA-30 Performance Varies
  11. Practical SDR Listening Advice
  12. FAQ
  13. Related Products
  14. Further Reading
  15. References

Software Defined Radio, usually called SDR, has fundamentally changed the way radio enthusiasts, experimenters, and shortwave listeners receive signals. What once required a chain of specialized analog circuits can now be performed largely through digital signal processing and software algorithms.

With a traditional radio receiver, users normally tune to one frequency and listen. With an SDR, however, the radio spectrum becomes visual, interactive, and much more flexible. You can see carriers, detect interference, change filters in real time, switch demodulation modes instantly, and analyze weak signals in ways that were once limited to expensive communications receivers and laboratory equipment.

This guide explains the principles behind SDR, the importance of I/Q sampling, the role of portable receivers such as the Malahit DSP SDR V3, and the practical reality that antennas often matter more than the receiver itself—especially for shortwave listening.

1. What Is a Software Defined Radio?

Software Defined Radio is a radio communication system in which many signal-processing functions traditionally performed by dedicated hardware are instead performed by software.

In a traditional analog radio, the signal path typically follows this chain:

Antenna → RF Amplifier → Mixer → Intermediate Frequency Filter → Demodulator → Audio Amplifier

Each block performs a dedicated hardware role. If you want to change how the radio behaves, you often need to change the hardware design itself.

In an SDR receiver, the architecture shifts much of that complexity into software:

Antenna → RF Front End → Analog-to-Digital Converter → Digital Signal Processing → Audio Output

Because of this approach, a single SDR platform can support multiple radio modes and signal-processing features through firmware or software, without requiring a different analog receiver design for each task.


Figure 2. SDR shifts many traditional radio functions from fixed hardware into flexible digital signal processing.

2. Why SDR Is Different from Traditional Radios

One of the most transformative advantages of SDR is that it makes the radio spectrum visible. Instead of tuning blindly, the user sees stations appear as spectral peaks and watches signal history unfold in the waterfall.


Figure 3. The spectrum and waterfall view help users identify signals, interference, fading, and band activity in real time.

This visualization provides several practical benefits:

  • Signals can be identified much faster.
  • Interference sources become easier to recognize.
  • Fading, drift, and overload are more obvious.
  • Multiple stations can be observed across a band segment at once.
  • Weak carriers become visible even before they are fully audible.

For shortwave listeners, this is especially useful because propagation changes throughout the day. SDR makes it possible to respond to those changes in a far more informed and efficient way than with a traditional analog receiver.

3. The Core Technology: I/Q (Quadrature Sampling)

One of the most important concepts in SDR is quadrature sampling, usually referred to as I/Q sampling.

In SDR, the receiver measures two related signal components that differ by 90 degrees in phase:

  • I (In-phase)
  • Q (Quadrature)

Mathematically, these can be represented as:

Formula Image 1
I = cos(ωt)
Formula Image 2
Q = sin(ωt)

Together they form a complex signal representation:

Formula Image 3
S(t) = I(t) + jQ(t)



Figure 4. I/Q sampling preserves amplitude and phase information, enabling advanced digital demodulation and spectrum analysis.

By preserving both components, the receiver retains enough information to reconstruct the signal in software. This is what makes digital filtering, FFT spectrum displays, frequency shifting, AM detection, SSB demodulation, and many other SDR features possible.

In practical terms, I/Q is one of the reasons SDR behaves less like a conventional radio and more like a flexible signal-processing instrument.

4. Typical SDR Signal Processing Chain

Although implementations vary, most SDR receivers follow a similar signal flow:



Figure 5. The SDR signal chain begins at the antenna and ends in digital demodulation and audio or data output.
  1. Antenna: receives electromagnetic energy from the environment.
  2. RF Front End: provides filtering, protection, and sometimes amplification.
  3. ADC or Tuner Stage: converts or prepares the signal for digital sampling.
  4. Digital Signal Processing: performs filtering, gain control, demodulation, FFT analysis, and audio recovery.
  5. Output Stage: sends audio to headphones or a speaker, or exports data to software tools.

This architecture allows one receiver to support many listening tasks, from AM and FM to SSB, CW, and digital modes, using software-defined methods rather than fixed analog circuitry.

5. The Malahit DSP SDR V3 Portable Receiver

The Malahit DSP SDR V3 has become one of the most talked-about portable SDR receivers because it offers a self-contained SDR experience without requiring a PC. For many users, that is its biggest attraction.


Figure 6. The Malahit DSP SDR V3 integrates spectrum display, DSP processing, and battery-powered operation in a handheld format.

Typical strengths include:

  • Portable all-in-one SDR receiver design
  • Real-time spectrum and waterfall display
  • Support for AM, FM, SSB, and CW demodulation
  • Battery-powered field operation
  • Compact size suitable for travel and portable listening

In effect, it brings many of the visual and analytical advantages of desktop SDR into a handheld format, making it highly attractive to shortwave listeners, radio experimenters, and portable monitoring enthusiasts.

6. Inside the Malahit SDR Architecture

Internally, a portable SDR such as the Malahit typically includes several major functional blocks:

  • RF input stage
  • Front-end filtering and signal conditioning
  • Tuner or sampling section
  • Main DSP or high-speed microcontroller
  • Audio codec and output stage
  • Battery and power-management circuitry
  • Display and user-interface subsystem

Figure 7. An example of internal architecture of a portable SDR receiver: RF front end, digital processing, audio stage, and power management.

The internal signal path can be summarized like this:

Antenna

RF filtering

Tuner or ADC

I/Q digital processing

Demodulation

Audio output

In SDR systems, firmware matters because it directly influences behavior such as AGC response, filter performance, UI responsiveness, waterfall rendering, and sometimes even subjective listening quality.

7. What Signals Can SDR Receivers Receive?

Depending on hardware capability and the antenna system, SDR receivers can cover a remarkably wide range of listening activities.

AM broadcast
FM broadcast
Shortwave broadcast
Amateur radio
Aviation communications
Marine communications
CW and SSB utility signals
Digital modes
ADS-B aircraft data
Weather and satellite-related signals

This flexibility is one of the strongest reasons SDR has become so popular. A single device can serve as a general coverage receiver, learning tool, and visual signal analyzer all at once.

8. Active antenna amplifier

An active antenna amplifier, often called an LNA (Low Noise Amplifier), is used near the antenna to boost weak signals before they are weakened by feedline loss.


Figure 8. A wideband LNA can help weak-signal reception, but too much gain may cause overload and intermodulation.
Antenna

Low Noise Amplifier

Coaxial Cable

SDR Receiver

Potential benefits include:

  • Compensation for coaxial cable loss
  • Improved weak-signal reception
  • Better performance from physically small antennas

Potential drawbacks include:

  • Receiver overload
  • Raised noise floor
  • Intermodulation products
  • False or spurious signals

In practice, an amplifier is not a magic upgrade. A better antenna in a quieter location often improves reception more than simply adding gain.

9. Best Antennas for Shortwave Reception

For shortwave and HF listening, the antenna system often matters more than the receiver itself. Three practical antenna categories are especially relevant to SDR users.

9.1 Long Wire Antenna



Figure 9. A long wire antenna remains one of the most economical and effective ways to improve shortwave reception.

A simple long wire setup often looks like this:

10–20 m wire

9:1 balun or matching transformer

Receiver

Advantages:

  • Strong signal capture
  • Very low cost
  • Good DX capability
  • Simple to build and install

9.2 Magnetic Loop Antenna



Figure 10. Magnetic loop antennas are often favored in noisy locations because they can improve signal-to-noise ratio.

Advantages:

  • Compact physical size
  • Better performance in noisy urban settings
  • Directional nulling of interference
  • Well suited to balconies and limited spaces

9.3 Active Mini-Whip Antenna


Figure 11. Active mini-whip antennas are compact, but their effectiveness depends heavily on grounding and installation environment.

Advantages:

  • Very small size
  • Wide frequency coverage
  • Convenient where installation space is extremely limited

Disadvantages:

  • More vulnerable to local electrical noise
  • Grounding is critical
  • Can be less forgiving than a loop or outdoor wire for HF reception

10. Why MLA-30 Performance Varies

Many beginners say the MLA-30 is noisy, while experienced listeners sometimes use it quite successfully. The difference usually comes down to installation quality rather than the loop itself.

Figure 12. An MLA-30 installed outdoors and away from household electronics can perform far better than the same loop used indoors.

Indoor Installation

This is one of the most common reasons for poor results. Indoor environments are full of RF noise from LED lamps, routers, chargers, televisions, computers, and switching power supplies.

Proximity to Electronics

Even if the loop is near a window, it may still be too close to the building’s wiring and noise sources. Moving the antenna outdoors often reduces the noise floor dramatically.

Incorrect Orientation

Magnetic loops have directionality. Rotating the loop can null a noise source or improve signal readability.

Poor Power Quality

Since the MLA-30 uses an active amplifier and bias-tee arrangement, a noisy USB power source can inject additional interference into the receiving system.

Too Much Gain

Increasing receiver gain does not necessarily improve reception. It may only brighten the waterfall and raise the apparent noise floor.

Practical takeaway: When an MLA-30 sounds noisy, the real problem is often the surrounding electrical environment, not the antenna design itself.

11. Practical SDR Listening Advice

If you want better real-world SDR reception, especially on shortwave, the following priorities are usually more effective than simply buying more gain or a more expensive radio:

  1. Improve antenna placement. Outdoor placement usually helps more than adding gain.
  2. Reduce local noise sources. Distance from household electronics matters enormously.
  3. Use moderate gain settings. Avoid overloading the receiver.
  4. Experiment with antenna direction. Especially important for magnetic loops.
  5. Learn the waterfall display. It reveals fading, overload, interference, and signal behavior.

In many cases, a modest SDR connected to a well-installed antenna will outperform a more expensive receiver used in a poor RF environment.

FAQ

What is the biggest advantage of SDR compared with a traditional radio?
SDR combines flexible digital signal processing with live spectrum and waterfall visualization, allowing one receiver to support multiple modes and provide much greater signal insight.
Why is I/Q sampling important in SDR?
I/Q sampling preserves both amplitude and phase information, allowing the receiver to reconstruct the signal digitally for filtering, demodulation, FFT display, and many advanced SDR functions.
Is the Malahit DSP SDR V3 good for shortwave listening?
Yes. It is popular because it offers a portable all-in-one SDR experience with spectrum display and support for AM, SSB, CW, and other listening modes, though antenna choice still plays a major role.
What antenna is best for shortwave listening?
In a quiet location, a long wire is often one of the most effective low-cost choices. In a noisy urban environment, a magnetic loop may provide a better signal-to-noise ratio.
Why does an MLA-30 seem noisy for some users?
Most often because it is used indoors or too close to electronic noise sources. Outdoor placement, cleaner power, and correct loop orientation can make a major difference.

Further Reading

References

The following references were used for background reading and technical context:

  1. RTL-SDR.com – About RTL-SDR
    https://www.rtl-sdr.com/about-rtl-sdr/
  2. PySDR – Sampling and IQ Data
    https://pysdr.org/content/sampling.html
  3. Malahit Team – Official Website
    https://malahiteam.com
  4. Ham Radio Secrets – Shortwave Antenna Guide
    https://www.hamradiosecrets.com/shortwave-antenna.html
  5. SWLing Post – Wire Antennas vs Mag Loop Antennas
    https://swling.com/blog/2021/08/wire-antennas-vs-mag-loop-antennas/
  6. Electronics Notes – Low Noise Amplifier Basics
    https://www.electronics-notes.com/articles/radio/rf-amplifier/low-noise-amplifier-lna.php

Sunday, March 8, 2026

How to Improve Shortwave Reception on the Malahit DSP SDR V3

How to Improve Shortwave Reception on the Malahit DSP SDR V3

Published by IWISTAO

The Malahit DSP SDR V3 is one of the most powerful portable SDR receivers available today. With wide frequency coverage, DSP filtering, and spectrum display, it can receive signals from across the world.

However many users experience weak reception or excessive noise when listening to shortwave bands.

The radio itself is rarely the problem. The key factors are antenna placement, noise environment, and correct gain settings.

In this guide we explain how to dramatically improve reception performance.

1. Understanding Shortwave Reception

Shortwave signals propagate through the ionosphere and can travel thousands of kilometers. Reception quality depends on several factors:

FactorImpact
Antenna efficiencyDetermines how much signal is captured
Local noise floorLimits the ability to detect weak signals
Receiver gain structureControls amplification and overload
Propagation conditionsSolar activity affects signal strength

Among these factors, antenna placement has the largest effect.

2. Antenna Placement

The built-in telescopic antenna on the Malahit SDR is not optimal for shortwave reception. Using an external antenna can dramatically improve sensitivity. Recommended Antenna Types as below.

1. Long Wire Antenna

Or,



A simple 10-20 meter wire can work extremely well for shortwave listening for SW band of the radio.

Example setup:

Radio → 9:1 Unun → 15m wire antenna

Height recommendation:

3 – 10 meters above ground

2. Magnetic Loop Antennas


Magnetic loops are excellent for urban environments where electrical noise is high.

Popular models include:

  • MLA-30 Active Loop
  • YouLoop Passive Loop
  • Airspy HF Loop

Advantages:

  • Low noise pickup
  • Compact size
  • Works well indoors

3. Active Loop Antennas

Active loops include a built-in amplifier and can receive weak signals effectively.

However placement is critical to avoid amplifying noise. 

3. Reduce Electrical Noise

Modern homes contain many devices that generate RF interference:

  • LED lighting
  • Switching power supplies
  • Wi-Fi routers
  • Computers
  • Phone chargers
  • Solar power inverters

These devices raise the noise floor and mask weak signals.

Practical Noise Reduction Tips

  • Move the antenna away from buildings
  • Operate the radio using battery power
  • Install ferrite chokes on cables
  • Turn off nearby switching power supplies

4. Gain Settings on Malahit SDR

Correct gain configuration is essential. Many beginners set gain too high, which causes overload and distortion. The Malahit SDR offers extensive gain and DSP control, allowing the user to optimize reception.

Key parameters include:

  • RF Gain

  • Preamp

  • Attenuator

  • AGC

  • Noise Reduction

  • Bandwidth filters

The receiver allows RF gain adjustment from 0 to 59 levels

Many beginners make this mistake, Maximum gain = best reception.This is incorrect.

Too much gain causes:

  • Overload

  • Intermodulation distortion

  • Increased noise floor

Recommended Baseline Settings

ParameterRecommended Value
RF Gain20 – 30
PreampOFF
AGCSlow
Noise ReductionLow
Filter Bandwidth3-5 kHz

Increase gain slowly while watching the waterfall display, adjust gradually depending on signal strength.

When to enable Preamp

Enable the preamp only when:

  • Using small antennas

  • Listening to weak signals

  • Operating indoors

But avoid preamp if strong broadcast stations are nearby.

When to use Attenuation

If the waterfall shows:

  • Strong wide signals

  • Distorted audio

  • Multiple ghost signals

Then activate 10-20 dB attenuatio

5. DSP Filtering

The Malahit SDR includes powerful digital signal processing tools.The Malahit SDR includes powerful DSP features:

  • Adaptive Noise Reduction

  • Noise Blankers

  • Variable Bandwidth Filters

  • Auto Notch Filtering

These tools dramatically improve weak signal readability.

Recommended bandwidth settings:

ModeBandwidth
AM Broadcast5-8 kHz
Shortwave AM3-5 kHz
SSB2.2-2.8 kHz
CW300-500 Hz

Noise reduction can greatly improve weak signals. Adaptive noise reduction helps suppress background noise and improves intelligibility

6. Example Setup

Receiver Malahit DSP SDR V3

Antenna 15m long wire

Frequency 9.585 MHz

Mode AM

Recommended settings:

RF Gain: 25
Preamp: OFF
AGC: Slow
Noise Reduction: Level 10
Bandwidth: 4kHz

Expected improvement:

  • Lower noise floor

  • Clearer audio

  • Stable signal

7. Advanced Tips for Serious DX Listening

Use a balun or unun

Improves impedance matching.

Example: 9:1 unun for long wire

Use coax feedline

Reduces noise pickup. 

Example: RG-58 or RG-174 cable

Install antenna outdoors

Outdoor antennas outperform indoor antennas by a large margin.

Monitor propagation

Websites such as:

  • Solar flux reports

  • DX cluster networks

  • Shortwave schedules

help predict good listening times.

Conclusion

The Malahit DSP SDR V3 is capable of excellent performance when properly configured.

The three most important improvements are:

  • Better antenna placement
  • Lower electrical noise
  • Correct gain settings

With these techniques the radio can receive shortwave signals from across the globe.

References

 

Friday, March 6, 2026

MLA-30 Loop Antenna Setup: Why Installation Matters More Than Most Beginners Realize

 MLA-30 Loop Antenna Setup: Why Installation Matters More Than Most Beginners Realize

Shortwave / SDR / Antenna Guide

Published by IWISTAO

A detailed practical guide to getting the best real-world performance from the MLA-30 active loop antenna, with a focus on noise control, orientation, feedline routing, and installation strategy.

The MLA-30 is one of the most popular entry-level active loop antennas for medium wave and shortwave listening because it is affordable, compact, and easy to mount on a balcony, mast, or temporary pole. Typical MLA-30 documentation describes it as a receive-only wideband loop covering roughly 100 kHz to 30 MHz or, in some listings, 500 kHz to 30 MHz, with a small outdoor amplifier, a loop element about 60 cm in diameter, and a bias-tee style power injector feeding DC up the coax. 


What many beginners do not realize is that the MLA-30 is not the kind of antenna you simply “put somewhere outside” and expect to perform at its best. With this antenna, installation often matters more than the antenna itself. The same MLA-30 can sound disappointing in one location and surprisingly effective in another, mainly because active loops are extremely sensitive to local noise environment, feedline behavior, mounting method, and loop orientation. 

That is why experienced listeners often say the MLA-30 is less a “plug-and-play miracle antenna” and more a low-cost platform that rewards careful setup. In a noisy urban environment, a thoughtful installation can improve signal-to-noise ratio far more than swapping receivers or changing software settings. 


1. What the MLA-30 Actually Is

The MLA-30 is a receive-only active magnetic loop. The circular loop is not doing all the work by itself; the small preamplifier box at the loop feedpoint is a critical part of the system. The antenna ships with the loop element, about 10 meters of coax, a short jumper, a USB-powered bias injector, and hardware for mounting to a non-metallic support such as PVC, fiberglass, bamboo, or wood. The manuals specifically warn against transmitting into it and advise keeping it away from other transmitting antennas, because strong RF can damage the built-in amplifier. 

This matters because beginners often judge it as if it were a passive wire antenna. It is not. The MLA-30 is a compact active receiving system designed to help in limited-space environments, especially where a long outdoor wire is impractical. Sellers and manuals also emphasize its directional behavior, meaning that rotating the antenna can reduce certain noise sources or adjacent signals.

In practice, this makes the MLA-30 especially attractive for:

  • apartment balconies
  • small backyards
  • temporary listening posts
  • urban or suburban DX setups
  • SDR users who need a compact HF receive antenna

But it also means installation errors are amplified right along with the signals.


2. Why Installation Matters So Much

 

With many beginner antennas, poor installation only costs you a little performance. With the MLA-30, poor installation can completely change the listening experience.

There are four main reasons:

A. The MLA-30 is often limited by noise, not raw sensitivity

The amplifier is already sensitive enough for a lot of HF listening. The real problem in many homes is not “insufficient signal,” but overwhelming local noise from switching power supplies, routers, LED lamps, monitors, solar inverters, USB chargers, and building wiring. If you mount the loop near those sources, the antenna may faithfully amplify mostly interference. The installation guide itself notes indoor use is possible, but warns that indoor locations usually have more noise and that reinforced concrete structures can significantly weaken signals. 

B. The loop is directional, so placement and rotation affect results

One of the MLA-30’s biggest advantages is its ability to create nulls. The installation manual describes “dead spots” that can be aimed toward interference, and multiple product/manual sources note that rotating the antenna can reduce noise and improve distant reception. 

C. Active loops are vulnerable to common-mode problems

A frequent criticism in user reviews is that MLA-30 performance can degrade due to common-mode noise riding on the coax shield, especially when the system is close to household electronics. The SWLing discussion on the MLA-30 explicitly mentions common-mode issues and notes that noise behavior and null performance can deteriorate, especially as frequency rises. 

D. Cheap active loops can vary from “surprisingly good” to “underwhelming”

The MLA-30 has earned both praise and criticism. Some experienced listeners report excellent urban shortwave results and favorable comparisons with simple wire antennas, while others point out limitations in dynamic range, matching, and high-frequency null quality. That mixed reputation is exactly why installation becomes the deciding factor for most owners. 

3. The Biggest Beginner Mistake: Mounting It Too Close to the House

This is the most common problem by far.

A beginner buys an MLA-30, mounts it on a balcony railing or just outside a window, runs the coax directly into the radio, and then wonders why the waterfall is full of hash, birdies, spikes, and broadband junk. The antenna is working. The installation is not.

The loop should be placed as far away from indoor noise sources as practical. The official-style installation instructions recommend an open area and explicitly say to choose a location far from interference sources. They also recommend a non-metal support rather than a metal pole. 

That means, in practice:

  • farther from walls is usually better
  • farther from routers and monitors is better
  • farther from LED lighting circuits is better
  • farther from USB chargers is better
  • farther from solar equipment and Ethernet runs is often much better

Even moving the loop a few meters can transform performance. Many beginners underestimate how local the worst noise sources are. A placement that looks only slightly different physically can be dramatically different electrically.

Better locations

A beginner-friendly priority list usually looks like this:

  1. Small mast or PVC pole in open yard
  2. Balcony edge, projecting outward from the building
  3. Roof edge or terrace with some separation from wiring
  4. Window mount away from indoor electronics
  5. Indoor mount only when nothing else is possible

The MLA-30 can work indoors, but manuals and user experience both suggest that indoor use is a compromise, not the target scenario.

4. Why a Non-Metal Support Pole Matters

The installation manual specifically recommends PVC, wood, bamboo, or similar non-metallic supports and warns against metal poles. 

Beginners sometimes ignore this because the loop looks mechanically small and they assume the support does not matter. But the support is part of the nearby electromagnetic environment. A metal mast close to the loop can distort the field around the antenna, alter symmetry, affect null depth, and sometimes increase unwanted coupling to noise.

A PVC pipe is cheap, weather-resistant, electrically quiet, and widely used for MLA-30 mounting. It is not glamorous, but it is one of the easiest upgrades to get right from the beginning.

A simple good setup is:

  • 60–100 cm loop mounted on the included amplifier housing
  • vertical PVC support tube
  • coax dropped cleanly away from the loop
  • loop placed in open air rather than pressed against metal railings or gutters

The goal is not merely to hold the loop upright. The goal is to preserve the loop’s directional behavior and minimize unwanted coupling.

5. Orientation: The Secret Weapon Beginners Underuse

The MLA-30 is directional. This is one of its strongest advantages, and most new users barely exploit it.

The manuals and product literature repeatedly note that rotating the antenna can improve reception or reduce interference by using the loop’s nulls. 

What does that mean in practical terms?

If you hear a loud local noise source on 7 MHz, 10 MHz, or medium wave, try slowly rotating the loop. At some angles the noise will peak; at others it will dip. Your best listening angle is often not where the target station is strongest in absolute terms, but where the noise drops the most. That produces the best intelligibility.

This is the key mindset shift:

With an active loop, you are often optimizing for signal-to-noise ratio, not maximum signal meter reading.

That is why installation matters more than beginners realize. If the loop is fixed in a bad orientation, close to a wall, unable to rotate, and tangled in feedline noise, the directional advantage is largely wasted.

Practical rotation advice

For beginners, the best method is simple:

  • tune to the problem signal or noise source
  • rotate the loop slowly
  • pause at each angle
  • listen for the point where noise dips most strongly
  • then recheck nearby frequencies

The manual even says you do not need to know the exact geometric direction in advance; just rotate until the noise decreases. 

6. Feedline Routing Is More Important Than People Expect

Because the MLA-30 includes a 10-meter coax run, many users assume coax routing is irrelevant. That is a mistake.

If the coax hugs noisy walls, lies across power bricks, runs next to switch-mode supplies, or dangles beside a monitor and USB hub, the feedline can pick up unwanted common-mode noise. In that case, the antenna system is no longer only the loop in the air. The outside of the coax can become part of the problem. User commentary around the MLA-30 has specifically raised common-mode noise as a real-world issue. 

Best practices for the coax

  • Let the coax leave the loop at a right angle if possible, rather than draping along the loop support.
  • Keep it away from AC adapters, routers, power strips, and LED lighting supplies.
  • Avoid bundling it tightly with house wiring.
  • Do not coil extra coax right beside the receiver and power injector.
  • If possible, add ferrite chokes on the feedline near the receiver end and, ideally, at additional points where noise may enter.

Even though the cited manuals do not go deeply into ferrites, the common-mode behavior discussed in MLA-30 reviews makes this one of the most practical real-world improvements.

For many listeners, adding ferrites and rerouting the coax is the difference between “the MLA-30 is noisy” and “the MLA-30 is quiet.”

7. Power Supply Quality: Not Always the Main Problem, But Still Worth Attention

The MLA-30 is powered through a bias injector, typically from USB power. One MLA-30 instruction sheet says the injector is well filtered and found no discernible difference versus a 12 V linear supply in its own testing, while also noting that users who prefer can power it from a 12 V battery. 

That is useful, but it does not mean every USB power arrangement is equally quiet in every station. In real homes, the USB source, nearby devices, and grounding environment can all affect noise.

A good beginner approach is:

  1. Start with the included or a decent USB source.
  2. If you hear broadband hash, try a power bank.
  3. Compare noise floor with the USB charger plugged in versus disconnected.
  4. Keep the bias injector away from the receiver’s RF input cables and computer clutter.

In other words, do not obsess over exotic power supplies first. But do test alternatives. The best setup is the quietest one in your actual environment.

8. Height Helps, but Separation Helps More

Beginners often assume that “higher is always better.” With the MLA-30, that is only partly true.

Yes, getting the loop above nearby obstructions and out into clearer air can help. But for this particular antenna, distance from noise sources is often more important than simply adding height.

For example:

  • moving the loop from a noisy indoor shelf to an outdoor balcony may help more than adding 3 extra meters of mast height
  • moving it away from house wiring may help more than putting it at the roof ridge directly above the electrical service area
  • placing it on a short PVC mast in open yard space may outperform a higher mount beside metal gutters and LED floodlights

The installation guide’s emphasis on openness and distance from interference sources reflects this reality. 

So the smarter beginner question is not only “How high can I put it?” but also:

“How electrically quiet is that spot?”

9. Outdoor vs Indoor Use

The MLA-30 can be used indoors, and the manual says so. But the same manual also warns that indoor environments usually contain more noise and that reinforced concrete reduces signal strength. 

That creates a very clear hierarchy:

Outdoor installation

Best for:

  • lower noise floor
  • stronger HF signals
  • better nulling
  • more consistent results

Indoor installation

Acceptable only when:

  • outdoor mounting is impossible
  • you can place the loop near a quieter window
  • you are willing to experiment heavily with orientation
  • your building has a relatively low electrical noise environment

For apartment listeners, even a modest outside placement on a balcony edge can be a major improvement over an indoor mount one meter behind the wall.

10. The MLA-30 Is Directional, but Not Magic

This is another point beginners should understand early.

The manuals and listings describe “excellent directivity,” but that does not mean the MLA-30 can always null everything. In real-world RF environments, some noise arrives from multiple directions, some enters through feedline common-mode currents, and some comes from the receiver or computer itself. The SWLing technical comments also caution that null performance may degrade higher up the HF range. 

So when rotation does not produce a dramatic null, that does not necessarily mean the antenna is defective. It may mean:

  • the noise is being coupled through the coax, not the loop aperture
  • the noise source is too close and too broad
  • multiple reflective paths are involved
  • the signal is coming from several arrival angles
  • the frequency is high enough that the loop’s pattern is less ideal than at lower HF or MW

This is why experienced users evaluate the MLA-30 as a system, not just a ring of metal.

11. A Good Beginner Setup Procedure

Here is a practical sequence that works well.

Step 1: Assemble the loop correctly

Use the supplied hardware, form the loop cleanly, and mount it on a non-metal support as the instructions describe. Make sure the amplifier housing is secure and weather exposure is reasonable. 

Step 2: Start outside if at all possible

Even a temporary outdoor test is better than concluding too quickly that the antenna is poor.

Step 3: Choose the quietest available location

Do not choose the most convenient place first. Choose the quietest place first.

Step 4: Route the coax deliberately

Keep it away from household electronics and mains wiring. Add ferrites if available.

Step 5: Compare several orientations

Test on MW, lower shortwave, and upper HF. Noise nulls can change with frequency.

Step 6: Compare power options

Try USB charger, power bank, or other quiet source.

Step 7: Listen at different times of day

HF conditions and neighborhood noise change. A setup that seems mediocre at noon may be excellent after dark.

Step 8: Judge by readability, not S-meter alone

A quieter signal is often better than a louder noisy one.

12. What Performance Should You Realistically Expect?

If installed well, the MLA-30 can be a very effective low-cost receive antenna, especially in limited-space or urban environments. Reviews and user reports show that some listeners find it quieter and more useful than simple wire antennas for shortwave work, especially where local noise is severe. One reviewer for the New Zealand Radio DX League reported that the MLA-30+ was quieter and more sensitive than a 10-meter wire in his setup and considered it ideal for an urban location with limited space. 

At the same time, technical criticism from experienced loop users suggests the design is not a top-tier reference antenna. Concerns include amplifier noise, imperfect matching, and reduced null quality at higher frequencies. 

Both things can be true:

  • it is not the last word in loop antenna engineering
  • it can still perform extremely well for the price when installed carefully

That is exactly why installation matters so much. A mediocre setup hides what the antenna can do. A smart setup reveals why so many hobbyists still recommend it as an affordable entry point.

13. Common Beginner Errors to Avoid

Mounting it directly against metal railings

This can compromise the loop’s pattern and increase unwanted coupling.

Using a metal support pole

The manual advises against it. Use PVC, fiberglass, wood, or bamboo instead. 

Keeping it indoors next to electronics

This is the fastest way to turn a noise-reducing antenna into a noise-collecting antenna.

Ignoring orientation

If you never rotate the loop, you are giving up one of its main advantages.

Letting the coax become part of the antenna

Poor routing and lack of choking can introduce common-mode noise. 

Expecting it to behave like a resonant transmitting loop

It is a broadband receive-only active loop, not a high-Q tuned transmitting magnetic loop. 

Connecting it to transmit equipment

Do not transmit into it. The manuals clearly warn that this can damage the amplifier. 

14. Best Use Cases for the MLA-30

The MLA-30 makes the most sense when:

  • you live in an apartment or urban neighborhood
  • you cannot install a long wire
  • you want a compact HF receive antenna for SDR use
  • you are willing to experiment with orientation and placement
  • you need something discreet and easy to mount temporarily or semi-permanently

It is less ideal when:

  • your environment has extreme RF overload from nearby transmitters
  • you expect premium dynamic range at all frequencies
  • you want a “set it once and forget it” antenna with no experimentation
  • you have plenty of room for full-size outdoor wire antennas in a quiet rural location

15. Final Thoughts

The MLA-30’s low price causes many beginners to underestimate it. They assume that if it performs badly, the antenna itself must be the problem. In reality, the MLA-30 is one of those antennas that teaches an important radio lesson early:

installation quality often matters more than hardware price.

Put it too close to the house, beside noisy electronics, on a metal support, with sloppy coax routing and no effort spent on loop orientation, and it may sound disappointing.

Mount it on a non-metal pole, place it in open air away from household noise, route the coax carefully, test a quieter power source, and rotate it to exploit its nulls, and the same antenna can become a very capable shortwave and medium-wave listening tool. 

For beginners, that is the real takeaway: the MLA-30 is not just an antenna you buy. It is an antenna you install intelligently.


References

  1. Tecsun Radios Australia, MLA-30 User Instructions
    https://www.tecsunradios.com.au/store/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/MLA-30-User-Instructions.pdf
  2. Amazon-hosted PDF, MLA-30+ Loop Antenna Installation Manual
    https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81rS6o%2BXt2L.pdf
  3. Passion Radio, Active Loop antenna MLA-30 Plus MegaLoop 500 kHz–30 MHz
    https://www.passion-radio.com/hf/megaloop-968.html
  4. SWLing Post, David reviews and compares the MLA-30 magnetic loop antenna
    https://swling.com/blog/2019/09/david-reviews-and-compares-the-mla-30-magnetic-loop-antenna/
  5. SWLing Post, MLA-30 loop antenna unboxing video
    https://swling.com/blog/2019/07/mla-30-loop-antenna-unboxing-video/
  6. New Zealand Radio DX League / Radio DX, The MLA-30+ Active Mag Loop Antenna
    https://radiodx.com/articles/technical/antennas/the-mla-30-active-mag-loop-antenna/

Thursday, February 26, 2026

OPT vs. OTL: The Two Defining Philosophies in Hi-Fi Tube Amplifiers

Published by IWISTAO

In high-fidelity audio, the debate between OPT (Output Transformer) and OTL (Output Transformer-Less) tube amplifiers has existed for decades. Both are vacuum tube amplifiers. Both promise musicality and harmonic richness. Yet their engineering logic, electrical behavior, and sonic presentation differ fundamentally.

Understanding these differences is not theoretical curiosity — it directly determines system synergy, speaker compatibility, and long-term listening satisfaction.


What Is an OPT Tube Amplifier?

An OPT amplifier uses an output transformer between the tube stage and the loudspeaker.

Vacuum tubes operate at high voltage and inherently high output impedance. Loudspeakers, however, typically present low impedance loads (4Ω–8Ω). Without impedance matching, power transfer becomes inefficient and unstable.

The output transformer performs impedance conversion, allowing proper energy transfer from the tube stage to the speaker load. It is both an electrical bridge and a tonal shaping element.

In short: OPT amplifiers rely on magnetic coupling to achieve drive capability and system stability.

OPT Sonic Profile

  • Full-bodied tonal density
  • Strong low-frequency authority
  • Wide speaker compatibility
  • Stable behavior under dynamic load

With orchestral music, jazz ensembles, or complex dynamic material, OPT amplifiers often deliver a sense of scale and foundation that feels grounded and confident.


What Is an OTL Tube Amplifier?

OTL (Output Transformer-Less) amplifiers remove the output transformer entirely. The tubes drive the loudspeaker directly.

This design philosophy eliminates transformer bandwidth limitations, core saturation, magnetic hysteresis, and phase shift effects.

To achieve workable output impedance, OTL amplifiers typically require:

  • High-current output tubes
  • Parallel tube arrays
  • Large power supplies
  • Carefully optimized circuit topology

OTL represents direct tube authority without magnetic mediation.

OTL Sonic Profile

  • Exceptional transparency
  • Fast transient response
  • Minimal coloration
  • Highly detailed midrange

OTL amplifiers often pair beautifully with high-efficiency horn speakers or wideband drivers, where speed and openness become immediately apparent.


Technical Comparison

Impedance Matching

OPT → Transformer-based matching provides flexibility.
OTL → Direct coupling demands stable, high-sensitivity speakers.

Engineering Challenge

OPT → Transformer design quality determines performance ceiling.
OTL → High-current design complexity and tube management dominate.

Sonic Orientation

OPT → Warm, harmonically rich, weighty.
OTL → Immediate, transparent, revealing.


Which Is Better for Hi-Fi?

There is no universal winner.

If your loudspeakers are moderately sensitive or difficult to drive, OPT provides authority and stability.

If you own high-efficiency speakers and prioritize clarity and immediacy, OTL may offer a uniquely immersive listening experience.

In serious Hi-Fi systems, synergy always outweighs ideology.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is OTL always more transparent than OPT?

OTL often delivers higher perceived transparency due to the absence of transformer coloration, but overall clarity depends heavily on implementation quality.

Why are high-quality output transformers expensive?

Wide bandwidth, low distortion, and stable magnetic behavior require premium core materials and precision winding techniques.

Can OTL drive 4Ω speakers?

Generally not recommended. OTL designs perform best with 8Ω+ high-sensitivity speakers.


Conclusion

OPT and OTL represent two engineering philosophies within vacuum tube amplification.

One relies on magnetic coupling for authority and adaptability.
The other relies on direct tube interaction for purity and immediacy.

The better choice depends on your loudspeakers — and your ears.

 


Experience Reference-Grade Tube Sound

Whether you prefer the authority of OPT or the purity of OTL, true Hi-Fi performance begins with proper engineering and system matching.

Explore Our Tube Amplifiers

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Further Reading

12AX7 vs 12AX7B: What’s the Difference—and Which One Is Better for Hi-Fi Audio?

 Published by IWISTAO

In the world of vacuum tube Hi-Fi, few small-signal tubes are as influential as the 12AX7. From line preamps to phono stages and driver sections, it remains one of the most widely deployed dual-triode tubes ever produced.

Shuguang vacuum tube 12ax7

But modern builders and audiophiles often encounter another designation: 12AX7B. Is it a different tube? An upgrade? Or simply a marketing suffix?

Shuguang 12AX7B

This article provides a complete engineering and listening comparison tailored specifically to high-fidelity audio applications.

1. The Reference: 12AX7 / ECC83

The 12AX7 (European name: ECC83) is a high-gain dual triode designed for voltage amplification. Each envelope contains two independent triode sections, making it ideal for multi-stage gain circuits.

Typical Applications

  • Hi-Fi line preamplifiers
  • MM phono stages
  • Phase splitters
  • Driver stages for EL34 / KT88 / 300B amplifiers

Key Electrical Parameters

  • Amplification factor (μ): ~100
  • Plate resistance: ~62 kΩ
  • Transconductance: ~1.6 mA/V
  • Heater: 6.3V / 12.6V
  • Plate dissipation: ~1.2W per triode

Its extremely high gain makes it indispensable—but also sensitive to noise and microphonics.

2. What Is 12AX7B?

12AX7B is typically a modern production revision of the 12AX7 platform. The "B" suffix is manufacturer-specific rather than an international tube registry classification.

Common Engineering Updates

  • Revised plate structure
  • Improved cathode coatings
  • Enhanced vacuum processing
  • Better mechanical stability
  • Lower microphonics (selected batches)

Electrically, it remains fully compatible with ECC83 / 12AX7 circuits.

3. Electrical Compatibility

Plug-and-Play Substitution:

  • Identical pinout
  • Same gain factor
  • Same heater requirements
  • Same bias range

No circuit modification is required when substituting 12AX7B into a 12AX7 design.

4. Construction & Mechanical Differences

Plate Geometry

Some B-versions use thicker plates for improved thermal stability.

Grid Precision

Refined grid alignment may enhance linearity.

Mica Support

Additional spacers reduce vibration-induced microphonics.

Vacuum Quality

Improved degassing processes may extend lifespan and reduce noise.

5. Sonic Comparison in Hi-Fi Systems

Vintage / NOS 12AX7

  • Warm midrange density
  • Rich harmonic overtones
  • Smooth treble texture

Modern 12AX7B

  • Cleaner background
  • Faster transient response
  • Brighter perceived extension
  • Better batch consistency

System resolution, speaker efficiency, and power supply design will determine audibility of these differences.

6. Application Matching

Line Preamps

Either tube performs well; prioritize low microphonics.

Phono Stages

Use screened low-noise selections regardless of suffix.

Driver / Phase Splitter

12AX7B offers consistent modern production stability.

Boutique Manufacturing

Modern supply chains favor 12AX7B for repeatable QC.

7. Expanded FAQ

Can I replace 12AX7 with 12AX7B directly?

Yes. They are electrically interchangeable.

Is gain different?

No. Both maintain μ ≈ 100.

Which is quieter?

Depends on screening; many modern B versions test lower in noise.

Better for phono?

Low-noise grading matters more than suffix.

More reliable?

Modern production can offer improved consistency.

Upgrade Your 12AX7 Tube Stage

Power supply filtering, output transformers, and choke design dramatically influence the performance of 12AX7-based circuits.

Shop Vacuum Tube 12AX7B

Discover transformers and choke upgrades optimized for tube preamplifiers and phono stages.

Further Reading

Monday, February 23, 2026

From By Feel to By Formula: The Legends Who Transformed the Speaker World

Published by IWISTAO

The Two Pioneers Who Changed the Loudspeaker World and the Story Behind the “T/S Parameters”

Today, any acoustic engineer designing a loudspeaker will skillfully open speaker design software, input parameters such as Fs, Qts, and Vas, and instantly see a precise low-frequency response curve appear on the screen. We seem to have forgotten that in the era before this set of “magic spells,” designing an outstanding loudspeaker was more like an arcane art—dependent on experience, intuition, and sometimes even luck.

The transformation from “mysticism” to science originated from two engineers separated by half the globe—A. Neville Thiele of Australia and Richard H. Small of the United States. Their story represents a classic “intellectual relay” in the history of acoustics, ultimately reshaping the design paradigm of low-frequency loudspeakers.

 


Act I: The Australian Broadcast Engineer’s “Unified Standard” Challenge

The story begins in Australia during the 1950s and 1960s.

The central figure, A. Neville Thiele, was a senior engineer at the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC). His work confronted a very practical and thorny problem: ABC operated numerous recording studios and monitoring rooms across the country, and he needed to equip them with monitoring loudspeakers that delivered consistent performance.

At that time, there was no unified theoretical guidance for matching loudspeaker drivers with enclosures. Engineers largely relied on repeated trial and error, investing significant time and materials to build prototype cabinets. Through listening tests and measurements, they would gradually optimize the design. This approach was not only costly and inefficient, but also heavily dependent on the individual designer’s personal experience, making performance difficult to replicate and standardize.

Thiele was dissatisfied with this inefficiency. Drawing upon his strong background in electrical engineering, he noticed something remarkable: the mathematical shape of the low-frequency response curve of a loudspeaker mounted in an enclosure bore a striking resemblance to the response curves of classical electrical filters described in textbooks—such as Butterworth and Chebyshev filters.

This was the epoch-making “Aha!” moment.

Thiele boldly proposed a hypothesis:
Could this complex “loudspeaker–enclosure” acoustic system be fully modeled as a standard high-pass filter circuit describable entirely by equations?

In 1961, he published his research in the Australian journal Proceedings of the IREE Australia. In his paper titled Loudspeakers in Vented Boxes, he systematically applied filter theory to explain vented-box design for the first time. He defined a series of “alignments,” which were essentially different types of filter responses.

However, due to the limitations of academic communication at the time, Thiele’s pioneering work remained largely confined within Australia and did not attract widespread attention from the international audio engineering community. A seed capable of igniting a revolution was temporarily buried in the soil of the Southern Hemisphere.

 


At that time, there was no unified enclosure theory. Designers relied on trial-and-error cabinet construction and listening tests.

Thiele observed that loudspeaker low-frequency response resembled classical electrical filter curves. This led to his breakthrough hypothesis:

The loudspeaker-enclosure system could be modeled as a high-pass filter.

He expressed the vented-box transfer function as:

H(s) = s4 / (s4 + a3s3 + a2s2 + a1s + 1)

This equation described the acoustic output as a 4th-order high-pass filter alignment.

 


Act II: The American Doctoral Student’s “Intellectual Discovery”

In the early 1970s, the stage shifted to the University of Sydney.

An American doctoral student named Richard H. Small was pursuing his PhD there. During his research, he happened upon Thiele’s paper, published a decade earlier.

Small immediately recognized its enormous value. Thiele’s work provided a solid theoretical framework for low-frequency design—but it was not yet sufficiently “user-friendly.” The original theory remained somewhat abstract and mathematically complex for the average engineer.

Small’s genius lay not only in understanding Thiele’s theory, but in recognizing how to “productize” and popularize it. His core contributions can be summarized in three key aspects:

1. Systematization and Simplification

Small expanded and refined Thiele’s theory, ultimately distilling it into the core parameters we know today: Fs, Qts, Vas, and others. He effectively packaged complex filter mathematics into a small set of parameters that were easy to measure and interpret, dramatically lowering the barrier to practical use. These parameters would later be collectively named the Thiele-Small Parameters, honoring both contributors.

2. Rigorous Validation

He established comprehensive measurement methodologies, enabling any laboratory to accurately determine the T/S parameters of a loudspeaker driver. This allowed the theory to move from paper into practice.

3. Global Promotion

Most critically, between 1972 and 1973, Small published a series of papers in the internationally influential Journal of the Audio Engineering Society (JAES).

Through JAES, the revolutionary ideas of the T/S parameters rapidly spread throughout the global audio engineering community. From JBL and EV to KEF, major loudspeaker manufacturers began listing T/S parameters as the “identity cards” of their woofer drivers. Designers finally had a common language and standardized design tools.

A. Neville Thiele (left) and Richard H. Small (right). Their work transformed speaker design from an artistic creation into a precise engineering science.

He simplified complex filter mathematics into measurable electro-mechanical parameters.

1. Total Q Relationship

1 / Qts = 1 / Qes + 1 / Qms

Where:
Qts = Total system Q
Qes = Electrical Q
Qms = Mechanical Q


2. Resonance Frequency

fs = 1 / (2π √(Cms · Mms))

This defines the free-air resonance of the driver.


3. Equivalent Compliance Volume

Vas = ρ · c2 · Cms · Sd2

Where:
ρ = Air density
c = Speed of sound
Cms = Mechanical compliance
Sd = Effective cone area


4. Efficiency Bandwidth Product

EBP = Fs / Qes

EBP is commonly used to determine enclosure alignment suitability.


Act III: A Collaboration Across Time and Space

Thiele and Small were not collaborators working side-by-side in the same laboratory. Their cooperation resembled a decade-long intellectual relay race. Thiele was the pioneer who introduced the revolutionary “filter analogy method.” Small was the integrator and promoter who sharpened the theory into a powerful practical tool and brought its significance to worldwide recognition.

Naming the parameters “Thiele-Small Parameters” is a tribute to the outstanding contributions of both pioneers.

Their work transformed loudspeaker design from an artistic craft into a precise engineering science.


Engineering Impact of T/S Parameters

Predictive Design

System performance can be calculated before enclosure construction.

Efficiency Optimization

Enabled compact, high-output subwoofer systems.

Industry Standardization

Provided a universal language for driver specification and enclosure design.


Engineering Extension — Core Enclosure Formulas

1. Sealed Box System Q (Qtc)

For a sealed enclosure, the total system Q in-box (Qtc) is related to the driver’s Qts and box volume:

Qtc = Qts · √(1 + Vas / Vb)

Where:
Qts = Driver total Q (free air)
Vas = Equivalent compliance volume
Vb = Internal box volume

Common alignments:
Qtc = 0.707 → Butterworth (maximally flat)
Qtc ≈ 0.5 → Overdamped
Qtc > 1 → Peaked response

2. Sealed Box Resonance Frequency (fc)

fc = fs · √(1 + Vas / Vb)

fs = Free-air resonance fc = System resonance inside enclosure

3. Bass Reflex Tuning Frequency (Fb)

For a vented (bass reflex) enclosure, the tuning frequency is determined by the port geometry:

Fb = (c / 2π) · √(Sp / (Vb · Leff))

Where:
c = Speed of sound (≈ 343 m/s)
Sp = Port cross-sectional area
Vb = Box volume
Leff = Effective port length (including end correction)

4. Helmholtz Resonance Equation

A bass reflex enclosure behaves as a Helmholtz resonator:

Fh = (c / 2π) · √(A / (V · L))

Where:
A = Port area
V = Cavity volume
L = Effective neck length

This equation describes the air mass in the port oscillating against the compliance of the enclosure air volume.

5. Typical Box Volume Alignment Table

Alignment Type Qtc / Tuning Characteristics
Sealed Butterworth Qtc = 0.707 Maximally flat response
Sealed Overdamped Qtc ≈ 0.5 Tight transient response
B4 (Bass Reflex) Fb ≈ 0.42 / Qts0.9 · fs Flat vented alignment
QB3 Optimized for small Vb Slight low-frequency peaking
C4 (Chebyshev) Intentional ripple Extended low-frequency output


6. Practical Engineering Insight

  • Increasing Vb lowers Qtc and fc
  • Higher Qts favors sealed alignments
  • High EBP drivers favor vented alignments
  • Helmholtz tuning controls ported bass extension

These equations form the mathematical backbone of modern loudspeaker enclosure design.


Conclusion — Standing on the Shoulders of Giants

From Thiele’s broadcast engineering problem to Small’s academic refinement, the T/S framework emerged through cross-disciplinary insight and knowledge relay.

Today, every simulated bass response curve is built upon their legacy.

True innovation often comes from re-examining familiar problems through a radically new lens.

 

Ready to Apply the Science to Your Sound?

Whether you are designing a custom enclosure or upgrading your current system, understanding T/S parameters is the first step.

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