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The Claytons are class A. Do they use any negative feedback?Synergy applies to speakers and amps of all types, not just tubes.
class b/ab is even better at this than class awhy,part of the o/p impendance of class afeeds also the ground return...
You can take a class AB amp, ramp up the bias and make it class A.I'm not sure what you mean by part of the output impedance of class A feeding the ground return unless you're referring to single ended class A. Class A can be push-pull as well as single ended.
More info is needed on the Claytons to fully understand the comparison......Actually more info is needed on both amps.The tube amp is obviously single ended.I would think that for more of an apples to apples comparison, the Claytons would also be single ended, which I'm guessing is part of the basis behind the comparison. Or was it just comparing an example of high power SS Class A vs "high" power tube Class A? True, both amps are very likely using at least a little bit of negative feedback for the sake of controlling distortion, but this aspect alone still doesn't make it an apples to apples comparison, to draw a tubes vs SS conclusion with regard to speaker impedance. A more meaningful comparison would be to compare a single ended tube amp and a single ended SS amp with similar output and similar distortion characteristics.
Keep in mind that the 300B amp has an output transformer, while the SS amp doesn't. While, yes, the transformer (or lack thereof) affects the output impedance, there's more to it than that. I would think that an autoformer MAC would act the same way as the 300B, no?
to give you an idea of a class-a damping factordf= RL || (Vout / Ibleed) / Zoutcheers
That doesn't factor in any feedback effects.
ha Zout is already nfb factoredcan you now see my point???if you got a better formula let us see it one thing i'll tell you vapor speakers need alot ofsilicon to sing not glass!!!!