Did he tell you something different than he said in his E-mail response? I'm curious....He doesn't strike me as the type of guy who waffles on the specs but I don't know him personally.
No, what I have been saying is based on the concepts from Brandon (I spoke to him about this last year) and my personal experiences. Not every board performs the exact same at this end, which is why I specify estimates and ranges. As I mentioned in my first post, these boards were not designed for that end of the performance scale.
The DNA20 can go a lot lower than the DNA30 so if you are interested in low wattage regulation, the DNA20 is the way to go of the two.
I'd like to revisit this quickly. You don't need to subohm a dna, true, but that's not necessarily true of other regulated devices. The reason you don't need to on a DNA is its voltage range, power range, and VW design. The DNA can "max out" its power at up to 2.3 ohms.
If you have a limited-voltage range VV regulator, you may well need to subohm to use the full range of available output current from the regulator. For example on a regulator limited to 6v, you would need to subohm to get any more than 6 amps out of it (36 watts).
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