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As this discussion progresses I see that we are still in the low numbers for power. This post already has me thinking of how to make a good 10-20 watt Class A SS or possibly hybrid amp with a very simple circuit. What I am thinking about is single tube driving a pair of MOSFETS. I have made some of these before but had not considered making one class A at low power. At the time I was still in the 100+ watt camp with the rest of you. I'm not in that camp so much anymore.
I think 25-30 watts might be an easier sell if you can get to that number and keep the circuitry minimal. You might attract a slightly broader audience. It's a mental thing. Maybe it's just me? Perhaps it has something to do with the old NAD 3020's 30 watts per channel still resonating in people's subconscious.......or maybe it's the Dynaco ST 70's 35 wpc? Many of Nelson's First Watt amps are 25-30 wpc also and are quite popular.Regardless......I'm just one dude with an opinion. Whether it's 10 watts or 20, or 30, I'd give it a try.
Hi Freo,I know the company, have owned their excellent amps. I had the first one which came from the work of Matti Otala. I sought him out at CES many years ago and had a nice lunch with him. A very sharp guy who found something people were not yet thinking about. The AES paper was written for engineers. In reading the last page of the manual I see: Due to high class A operation in all Electrocompaniet designs, it is normal for the AW 2x120 to feel warm. Proper ventilation is important.. From this statement I infer the amp is not full class A but just high class A. How high is high. Using Nelson Pass's estimate of dissipation = 3 times total power the amp should draw 720 watts (120 per channel x 2 x 3).I did a little figuring for a perfect lossless amp and came up with a theoretical number of dissipation = 2x idle power. But that does not include power transformer losses, rectifier losses, transistor saturation losses and the big one, how close to the rail can the out put get for any particular load. This is the biggest practical loss which brings the theoretical 2x to approach Nelson's 3x. In 1976 I designed a bridged amp to run off 13 volts in a car. I was very careful to maximize the output potential and got within about 0.2 volt of the 13 volt rail and 1 volt above ground. That amp would be like a 2.1x dissipation to output amp. I wrote my first post here not so much to get into a discussion of who makes class A amps but what a class A amp has to do to be a class A amp so that the reader could tell who was telling the truth . Everyone wants a class A amp. We want grade A meat, produce, milk and eggs. Manufacturers of amplifiers know we desire class A amps (frankly I don't desire them because of their power consumption). I don't know how well the USDA is monitoring our food quality but no-one is monitoring amplifier claims to be class A. That is why I wrote that extensive post so you the buyer could determine who was telling the truth.The OP asked "who makes amps with class A bias" I don't think we have found one yet. They do exist but you will likely find them in lower power ratings simply because of the high dissipation.
The buying public should realize that they have a powerful effect on what we as designers do. When asked "why do you make a 100 watt/ch amplifier I say: I don't think anyone needs one but they think they do. A low power amp is hard to sell." Fortunately low power is getting some attention. There is a low power circle here. http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?board=195.0I will say it again. A 100 watt amplifier with 99 watts of unused power does not control a speaker or make any difference. What controls a speaker is high damping and available current. What we need is an amplifier that sounds the same right up to clipping. The whole concept of headroom needs to be looked at. Shall we start a post on that?
Being merely a hobbyist...it was my understanding that full spectrum musical reproductioncan be challenging with ambitious Recorded Crest factors etc., That making use of Powered Sub-woofers or Woofers canrelive some of the heavy lifting burden of both Amps & monitors. Vandersteen hasgone down this path amongst many others....not too mention the DOLBY THX specification.I had a conversation many years ago with Tim de Paravicini of EAR. He had some strongopinions about Transformers & circuits etc., one take away was that many amps/transformerswould suffer from some saturation losses when subjected to full spectrum higher dB reproduction.So, is conventional wisdom correct...does making use of a powered woofer/subwoofer benefit us?Bi-amplification....active/passive or a hybrid of these?Can an RM-10 driving a typically modern speaker with 4ohm/85dB at reasonable 75-95 dB listeninglevels sitting 9' (3m) away cut the mustard so to speak?Nostalgia and rose colored glasses being what they are....I have always regretted selling my Wolcottand Sound-lab A3 system to buy books & tuition.
One thing i discovered in class-b is all the power goes into the power device from the lowest signal levels,this gives high quality damping from these low levels,something class-ab and class-a cant do,another thing is at idle class-b is dissipating less power than either class-ab and class-a,another thing is distortion class-b amplifiers had been known to have high distortion something that's not anymore with the work of Douglas Self who proved according to his meachanisms he can reduce distortion to vanishing levels...I have come across similar low distortion operation as well,i know this thread is about class-a,i merely compare different amplifiers to see the pros or cons they may have...hope you guys you'll forgive me..cheers...
Being merely a hobbyist...it was my understanding that full spectrum musical reproductioncan be challenging with ambitious Recorded Crest factors etc., That making use of Powered Sub-woofers or Woofers canrelive some of the heavy lifting burden of both Amps & monitors. Vandersteen hasgone down this path amongst many others....not too mention the DOLBY THX specification.I had a conversation many years ago with Tim de Paravicini of EAR. He had some strongopinions about Transformers & circuits etc., one take away was that many amps/transformerswould suffer from some saturation losses when subjected to full spectrum higher dB reproduction.So, is conventional wisdom correct...does making use of a powered woofer/subwoofer benefit us?Bi-amplification....active/passive or a hybrid of these?Can an RM-10 driving a typically modern speaker with 4ohm/85dB at reasonable 75-95 dB listeninglevels sitting 9' (3m) away cut the mustard so to speak?
I will locate my Volt meter and run some numbers.DONE> (from post #76 )around 2.1 volts @ 85~ish dB2.7 volts @ peak at 95dB.I have had had Snell active X-overs, marchand Bassisand Feedback destroyers, Ranes etc., today, handing off to two Tumults.And have also utilzed Powered bass cabinets...e.g., two Aurasound10" drivers with Hypex plate amps with a passive High Pass for the MTM.A colleague has hinted at selling me his Apogee Stages & Llano A100 amps.Actually his wife has done most of the encouragement. I will need to reconsidermy next direction in Hi-Fi. As stated previously, I miss those Soundlabs.I have followed Richard Vandersteen's lead with a powered Woofer/subs.and decent quality 6dB passive filters.
I invite anyone to give me a cogent argument why one needs a 100 watt amp to play a few watts.
Isn't anyone building a sensible 10-20 watt Class A transistor amp these days?
Hi Roger. A (very?) few still listen to music with little processing/wide dynamic range, not elevator pop drone music. Thus 250 unclipped peaks, vs "100 watt" clipped is still appreciated http://www.cordellaudio.com/he2007/show_report.shtml (scroll down to The Peak Power Demands of Well-recorded Music).http://www.lindellaudio.se/index.php/ampx/"Sensible" enough for me.cheers,AJ
George, I'm sorry, but you're REALLY beating the efficiency horse to death in the wrong thread. You should start a new thread about the benefits of non Class-A amps. Nearly everything you have said in this thread has little to do with Class A amps except for their poor efficiency.........which we (people who like Class A amps) are all very aware of, but chose to ignore. This has been covered by several in this thread already. Please stop.
Now there are people out there (guys who buy the big amps) who, for some reason, would be embarrassed if their amp clipped for 1 mS on just one CD on just one song. So they will pay any amount of money to never, never, ever have this happen. They have to suffer the consequences of the big amp burden which is cost, weight, power consumption and some other psychological traumas I cannot imagine.
All in all it was a nice way for Ben and myself to spend a few hours looking at something that is true but perhaps matters not so much.
We make a great sub system with an external amp and crossover..... I find it very handy to have the sub-woofer level control right there by the preamp so I can adjust is at will for different music. Because the sub level is right there I trim it for every record according to my desire for bass...... I can hardly express how this simple control has increased my enjoyment of my system.
Hi Roger,Hope you had a good 4th. Well, you Gished me there, so I'll parse and say, no offense to those that do, but I don't listen to JayZ. I did add the caveat about the few in my post. Classical, Jazz, Big Band etc., have plenty of examples of wide dynamic range (For another specific one, try Flim and the BBs "tricycle", uncompressed of course).I agree that some instantaneous clipping may very well be inaudible, but I would hesitate to not pay heed or not rely on controlled conditions for any such JND thresholds. Excluded argument there. Plenty of more reasonable cost/power amps out there that don't have to fall into mega-sized audiophile status symbol category. Not to mention Class D (from a sound perspective, not a "sound" perspective). Or simply wiser, technically informed loudspeaker choices when system building.Well, that depends on who you ask. Personally, I find Class A wasteful (yes, even the one I linked that you didn't comment on). But I don't live up north and I'm no audiophile, I concern myself with only music and sound (without the quotes).cheers,AJ
Roger, I listen primarily to classical, which is known to have peaks up to 40 db or more. I can't tell you how many times I noticed over the years an occasional slight compression (clipping) when listening to symphonic music. To mitigate this, one either has to have a very powerful amp that drives full range speakers, or, cross over the bass at 80 Hz of so to a powerful subwoofer to relive the main speakers and amp of this issue.The ATC speakers can handle very high spl's for dynamic speakers without breakup, which helps mitigate this issue some. Would like to investigate a active crossover for my tube setup to relieve the power amps and speakers below 80 Hz, and send it all to the sub.