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I am a little unclear on what exactly is going on with this Emotiva design.According to Emotiva, the actual amplifier gain stage and output devices are biased as conventional Class A/B, but the power supply is described as Class H.The power supply has a 2.5KVA transformer, a 240,000 uF capacitor bank and requires a 20 amp circuit. It has all the ingredients of and sounds very much like a linear power supply, but there must be some power supply switching operation to be called Class H.Doesn't seem to be any white paper or technical explanation of this, though, and I don't recall previously seeing a Class A/B amplifier combined with a switching power supply.Steve
For many years our Maggie 3As [now retired ] were driven by the Audio research DR250 Servo Mk2 amp. 240w of Triode bliss. A new kid on the block has taken over. With 1000W into 4/Ohms the Arion class "D" hybrid monoblocks have won out in our system. Now drive GT Audio speakers. There are many choices for amps with Maggies. High powered amps seem to give one that ease with headroom. Dynamics are more evident. The jump factor as well. The amp choice is subjective to the synergy of the system as well as the speaker. For us an amp that is not lean, bright or over detailed will work wonders on Maggies.charles
The only complaints people seemed to have about their latest X-REF subwoofers (built in EQ, pretty snazzy) is their lack of low end extension. I'm sticking with Epik though, that dual opposed design really is magic. I can't have a front firer any more.
Found a bit more, although it refers to the XPR-5:We have a two rail design in the XPR-5. The low rail, which is what the amp is powered from on idle up to about 50% of the amps voltage swing, and then the high voltage rail with takes it all the way to maximum output. By sitting on the lower rail most of the time, quiescent losses are greatly reduced. The amp runs really cool under normal operation.But when you need it, the rails instantly switch to the high voltage mode and presto, a beast is born! There is a high speed comparator that looks at the input signal and predicts where the output is going, and when needed, it turns on the high voltage rail BEFORE the output gets there. You can't fool it, even with high frequency transients, as its switching time is faster than the rise time of a 20kHz signal. Sweet!So, you get the SQ of a really well designed Class AB amp, with a huge efficiency improvement, and no sonic downside.We've been building Class H amps for a long, long time and we have the control loop down pat. It's more expensive than Class AB, but at a certain power level, it's just the only way to go. You can't justify the power losses on an amp this big.There is really no down side to a well designed Class H amp. But remember, it's all in the details. You have to start with a great sounding amplifier stage. And the Class H controller has to be done very carefully in order to minimize sonic artifacts. When done correctly, (like in the XPR-5) the result is amazing."http://emotivalounge.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=amps&action=display&thread=25083. . . Which leaves me puzzled as to why they're calling it Class H rather than Class G.
Have you had a chance to compare the XPA 1 with the Krell?
Did you have the Epik repaired?Jim
The Sunfire amps used an analog all-pass filter to create the required delay so the tracking power supply could follow the output waveform very closely. Cheers,Dave.
This sounds like the NAD circuit. It is essentially a secondary winding on the PS trannie that provides a high voltage rail and the headroom, in the case of NAD there are also additional output devices that are activated when the high rail gets current (IIRC the voltage is always on, but there is no current without activation. The high voltage rail can't take current for prolonged periods and will cause thermal shutdown when it is activated too often or over too long a time. The effect on the rest of the amp's SQ when not operating is minor but noticeable according to folks who worked this circuit in DIY mods to NADs. The extra output devices idling in parallel are the culprit in compromising SQ - however small the impact may be.Please don't ask me to look up the links, I don't remember the sites anymore.