Mr Peabody
Well-known member
I saw a company called Spec out of Japan that makes some Class D amps, anyone familiar?
Doubt the distortion spectra is anything like Ralph's OTL amps , just saying .........
The sound of a well designed amp is determined mostly , by ( simply put) the load its driving and clipping characteristics ( lack thereof or recovery ) so not surprised when one beats another since most not really level matching when comparing..
Glad you are enjoying them
Regards ..
I've maintained for years that the mark of a really good system is that its very hard to tell how loud its playing; the dynamics are coming from the recording rather than the electronics!
...I've maintained for years that the mark of a really good system is that its very hard to tell how loud its playing; the dynamics are coming from the recording rather than the electronics!
No doubt personal preference play a big role. What class D amps did you try? Which aspects of the class D sound made the good Electronic and Jazz, and not so great for Classical?
As I mentioned, for Classical, especially orchestral & choral, I like the detail, air, transparency, and micro-dynamics I'm getting from my Purifi amp. Bass too is the best I've heard in terms of depth and articulation.
Thank you, pietpara
Classical is my thing, but I don't doubt that at least some other genres benefit from "the maximum of dynamics, transparency and detail". But equally I believe that these qualities are less critical for others, at least depending on listening habits.
To date no-one has found a way to favor a certain genre of music over another. What makes an electronic product like an amplifier good for classical is exactly the same thing that will make it good for rock or jazz.
the best measuring
Not exactly , classical requires more class A or lose the Timbre , body and nuance on instruments at low levels , very critical in catching the micro /macro details of a symphony, much different from low crest factor rock which really sounds more realistic and best on class B drive ..!
So whats really critical Is amp selected transition point from class A to class B , hence why its necessary to match Speaker sensitivity, db required and load to amplifier bias operation ..
Regards
The best looking, the best measuring, and the best sounding amps out there, and built in Australia
Not exactly , classical requires more class A or lose the Timbre , body and nuance on instruments at low levels , very critical in catching the micro /macro details of a symphony, much different from low crest factor rock which really sounds more realistic and best on class B drive ..!
So whats really critical Is amp selected transition point from class A to class B , hence why its necessary to match Speaker sensitivity, db required and load to amplifier bias operation ..
Regards
At. All.load to amplifier bias operation
Class B amps, so I was lead to believe were primarily used for PA systems ? I know of no credible 'musical' amp that operates as such. Most Class A/B amps operate with an amount of initial bias into Class A before operating in A/B. Perhaps that is what you were trying to convey ?
The Wiggins Circlotron amplifiers made by ElectroVoice back the late 1950s were class B and intended for home hifi use, not PA. Normally class B introduces distortion at the signal crossing around the zero point since the magnetic field in the output transformer collapses. This made class B impractical for home use. The Wiggins Circlotron got around this problem because the output transformer does not have B+ imposed upon it so the magnetic field never collapses. As a result it was low distortion operating class B. It used a pair of 6V6 power tubes and made 25 Watts at full output! I suspect the reason it wasn't more popular is not because of its sound but because to execute a Circlotron you need two floating power supplies for the output section, so a pair of rectifier tubes and electrolytic filter caps that are insulated from the user. The extra expensive of this offset the cost of just adding an extra set of power tubes to get the same power in AB mode so the idea died.
The Circlotron resurfaced a few years later; for example we've been using it since the inception of the company. But so far its not been used again for class B although it could...
That was House of High Fidelity.Ralph,
Thank you for all the wisdom. It seems there are others that talk a good game, yet are simply know-it-all, opinionated idiots.
BTW, I remember first hearing your amplifiers when I was a student at U of M in the late 80's and early 90's at a stereo shop on Snelling Ave. I can't remember the name of the shop, but your amps with some Spica speakers were terrific.
All well and good 70 years ago, but I stand by my comment of not knowing of any credible Class B amps being produced for hi-fidelity music use today.
This statement is false in several ways. First, what you are talking about is the need for low level detail, which is common to all genres, even death metal. Second, the class of operation has nothing to do with that. Distortion does. The 'transition point' is unimportant, unless you have a class AB amplifier that is poorly designed. But you can have a class D amplifier do just as well, since they can be very good at low level detail, equal to or better than the best class A amplifiers (and take this from someone who has been designing and building class A amplifiers for the last 50 years). A class D amplifier doesn't have that transition thing to which you refer.
The speaker sensitivity has nothing to do with the At. All.
The loudspeaker impedance can affect the operating point of the amplifier though. Generally the lower the impedance, the more the amplifier will tend more towards AB operation. If the amplifier is tube and uses an output transformer, and if the transformer is properly loaded then the impedance will not affect this since the required load on the tubes will be satisfied. But in OTLs and solid state A/AB amplifiers the impedance can affect the class of operation. The sensitivity has nothing to do with it.
So class of operation has nothing to do with distortion , cant tell if you are playing or just intellectually dishonest, before peddling high feedback class D , your feedback mantra's were historical , now pedaling ClassD and you are all over the place with your faux science , no more anti feedback chat, still obvious you dont know nor understand the difference between speaker sensitivity and efficiency, you used to get that mixed up too...
I guess HIgh Feedback Class D is now where it's at Ralph, maybe with Spica's ......
can you Post up some actual bench numbers Ralph, to help educate the rest of us
Regards