Quesiton: for the money, which one would yield a bigger improvement?

Hey Wudai_e

I’m thinking that \multiwave adds multiple sinewaves and that the strength of these can be varied,
1 the lowest and 6 being the highest strength.

What the multi wave will do is to enable a faster recharging of the power supply caps
and provide a more robust sound.

On the settings screen you can see the thd damaged sinewave and scrolling past
that one there is a regenerated sine wave. The regenerated sine waves will have
a smooth rounded top and bottom portion of the sine wave. The multi wave
will have a thicker rounded top and bottom to the sine wave…

PaulCEO PS Audio

Jun '18

Yes, Ted and Elk are correct. The simplest way to think of MultiWave is a means of extending the peak charging time - the time the sine wave remains at its peak - as Elk was showing. That should act as if the power supply has more capacitors because there will (or should) be less ripple since the capacitors are able to charge more.

Not every product sounds better with more power supply capacitors. And remember, there are very few “rules” for high-end audio performance. We’re trying to second guess your equipment’s designer as well as adjust the synergy within your system.

I hope this helps give you an idea of sine vs multi wave…

Best wishes