Physical explanation of amp's break in?


Recently purchased Moon i-5, manual mention 6-week break in period, when bass will first get weaker, and after 2-3 weeks start to normalize. Just curious, is there ANY component in the amp's circuitry that known to cause such a behaviour?

I can't fully accept psycho-acoustical explanation for break-in: many people have more then one system, so while one of them is in a "break-in" process, the second doesn't change, and can serve as a reference. Thus, one's perception cannot adapt (i.e. change!) to the new system while remain unchanged to the old one. In other words, if your psycho-acoustical model adapts to the breaking-in new component in the system A, you should notice some change in sound of your reference system B. If 'B' still sounds the same, 'A' indeed changed...
dmitrydr

Showing 2 responses by pbb

Does it keep on breaking-in until it breaks down or does it stop exactly at the zenith of this process? Do you hold to the theory that the component unlearns this molecular path of least resistance trick if not used and has to go back to "conductivity class". Does a component reach a point where it should be tossed out because this prime molecular path is too worn to be of any use? As the other fellow on the other site puts it "inquiring minds want to know". Thanks.