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To my knowledge, there are no "fully digital" amplifiers....yet
QuoteTo my knowledge, there are no "fully digital" amplifiers....yetVinne,This sight claims that there are some amplifiers that keep the signal digital throughout the chain.Dennishttp://www.puredigitalaudio.org/digitalamplifiers/index.shtmlhttp://www.puredigitalaudio.org/resourcesSections.shtmlhttp://www.puredigitalaudio.org/glossary/index.shtml#D2D
I don't believe that this information is correct. In the home audio industry, the standard digital output is SPDIF. You cannot amplify SPDIF and low-pass filter it for speakers. To my knowledge, all the digital amps that claim to be "fully digital" use a chip that takes in the SPDIF signal, but inside the chip, there is D/A conversion to convert the SPDIF to analog (L and R are separated), and an A/D stage to to process the signal into a PWM type of format, where ...
brj, The digital receivers that you mention are NOT fully digital from source to speaker.They take the digital input from you source and do a D/A conversion inside the amp, then then convert it that analong signal to a digital to be amplified (Class D or Class T style), and then the amplified digital signal is filtered to recover the analog signal to be fed to your speakers. To my knowledge, there are no "fully digital" amplifiers....yet -Vinnie
Equibit?http://focus.ti.com/lit/ds/slas328/slas328.pdfSDIN(PCM) in, PWM out to amplifier stage. This is old and one of the first products to come out of TI after they bought Tocatta (I think). But it looks like the signal stays digital all the way without a DA/AD conversion. Unless it happens in the Equibit Modulator. Which looks like another name for "black box with secret stuff". But I could be wrong.Todd
Hi Vinnie,I have a question. In your FAQ you said that:"Unlike most conventional amplifiers, the L/R Negative (-) speaker binding posts of the Clari-T-Amp are not tied to GND or each other. Therefore, make sure that the equipment that you are connecting to them to DOES NOT tie these terminals together."Would you say that this pretty much rules out wiring this amp for headphones? A headphone jack always ties the two output grounds together. Does this apply to the standard Tripath amp also or does ...
I didn't realize that the Panasonic receiver used this chipset, and was incorrect to say that it wasn't digital all the way. This is about as close as it gets.
Tripath mentioned to me that they are working on something like this. We'll see what they come up with