Anyone HEARD the qol 'signal completion' device?


An ad in TAS... touting this box. I remain skeptical but would like to know what your impressions are if you have heard whatever it does!
woodburger

Showing 5 responses by lrsky

Your point Roscoeiii, is well taken by me.
Opinions without having experience has NO value.

I saw the Qol system a year ago...tried to engage them, as their basic principle of phase information restoration makes perfect engineering sense to me...

They, at that time were not ready for as much attention as they'd gotten...I wish them well, and look forward to trying one in my own system.

Larry
Face,
Is it the 'gain' or the dynamic range that is changed?
Two very different items...

Larry
Hifigeek,
Sorry to disagree...but...
Usually, less is more...but what if, big if here...that some thing, adds back, (restores) lost phase information, making for a more complete signal, one that looks more like the original?

My basic theology is YOUR theology, yet, having seen this, experienced what it 'appears' to do, I'm pulling for it, and do really believe in it's value.

Again, sorry to disagree...

Good listening,
Larry
I'm not aware that it would matter what type of speaker.
My understanding is that the device restores 'lost' phase information...restores it.
In that regard, the answer to the increased gain, may be answered.
More data, would equal more volume..more dynamic range.
So the 'illusion' of more gain, would be no illusion at all.
Dynamic range expansion, through recaptured, lost phase information.
Unless there's something I'm not getting, which is entirely possible.
Larry
After having experienced the Qol, AND reading reviews...I'm excited.
This is/could be, the straw that stirs the drink for music reproduction.
After all the bullshit, the Bose, the Polk SDA, the stuff we audiophiles are trying to forget...we come across this...the Qol. The name sucks...but the product is a step beyond...it's the Telephone, Xerox copies, Xrays, Core memory (think computers), Polaroid Cameras, Guttenburg Printing Press...Internal Combustion Engines...you name it.
This...is the next phase of audio as we've known it.

Larry