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Hi dan,Consider a 50W/ch amp using a common supply and traffo of a size comensurate with it's needs - regulation will be sufficiently poor that under REAL MUSIC conditions this amplifier, which might scrape in it's both channel rating with sinewaves, might produce peaks of 200W /ch before clipping on average musical programme. If the same amplifier were to have interposed a regulated supply, it would have to be set below the lowest mains sag, full 4 ohm load sag plus allow for regulator operating dr ...
Dan can you please expound a little design wise on what is required for a regulated supply to do the job correctly. I would think that the supply should have symetrical rise and fall times equal to or less than the amplifier it is to power as well as a dynamic impedance that is as low or lower than the passive supply it replaces. Scotty
Assuming that the regulator is a perfect source of DC is a simplistic viewpoint.It may sag under load and be slow to recover,they can exhibit ringing,ballisticovershoot and undershoot, and all of this performance can change over the audible bandwidth. The impedance measured in milliOhms can vary with frequency and vary under dynamic signal conditions.Wouldn't this varying source behavior and impedance have some impact on the performance of the circuit it is supplying power to or are we assuming that all regulated DC sources are behaving as perfect batteries.Scotty
Thank-you Dan, your answer addresses most of my concerns.It looks like you and Greg have a difference in viewpoint on the audible effects of the real-world behavior of regulators. Having heard the effects first hand of the difference between a conventional 3 pin regulator and shunt regulation in my preamp I have to say that I share your opinion that regulator behavior does matter and can significantly impact the sound of the circuit it supplies power to. Scotty