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HI Guys,Okay so we know that your're all trying to reproduce the music and or get to the emotion. At what point do you decide though how much you're prepared to spend on producing an amp giving the price you could sell it for, in terms of how much will you elaborate on design - adding extra power supplies to all requiring stages etc, the very best that the commercial world has to offer is usually presented in this way, do you think that most of this is not really required, or that the differences in quality would just be too small?
I like Hugh's idea of taking the GK-1 into multiple stages, is there any chance of one of you guys coming up with a no holds barred amp?What about designing the sources also, if your policies are to provide people with musical enjoyment at reasonable cost, then you've got a world class amp with only say an average commercial cd player. Okay so it sounds good, but how can mr average really afford a source worthy of such an amp, unless you as the designers provide a complete setup? I do agree that sources maybe a riskier business venture for you, as we're dealing with formats, and these are subject to change. Certainly amps are a safer bet, giving that all they do is amplify the source, I've got a world class amp and pre, I would like to make the best of it, but I'm not going to spend £5000 on a cd player to do this. There really isn't anyone offering good kits for cd players/dacs, I think cd will be around for a while so how about it, unless ofcourse you're already a few ateps ahead of me.ThanksRaj
Hi All, Outstanding topics! Unforunately, I only came upon it yesterday. I tried to catch up. I think I caught most everything, but this thread is huge. Sorry if this question was answered (I didn't see it if it was). I know DVV touched on class A biasing earlier. However, I have some more questions: 1. I never quite understood how biasing a transistor actually worked. Let's use the final stage (a current output pair) as an example for my question. When you set the bias, you're making the output transistor conduct a current (more curent for class A and less current for class A/B) at no signal. My question is, doesn't this current translate to DC on the speaker? Isn't this current goint right to the speaker load? Obviously it doesn't and I'm missing something. Could someone please explain.
2. My next question is about the difference between class A and class A/B. If when you bias a transitor, you are making it draw current. When would it ever be off in a class A/B. Even if the bias current is ever so small, it is coducting. So, it never seems to switch off.
3. Most (if not all) class A/B amps seem to have a class A region at very low outputs. Again, this question is related to the questions above. Specifically, how does this happen.
Haven't seen much on resistors yet, I've read something bout this on your website though Dan, the experience of bulk foil resitors and the 10db cut in noise, certainly interesting. How much do resitors affect the sound though, say a bulk metal foil resitor, which is certainly expensive, does it offer superior performance at all frequencies? If you read sites like AA, you'll find contradictions in 'heard' sound, what's the truth in measurment terms of what's happening here?Is it merley that an 'upgrade' like a superior resitor allow more info thru, and with say a system which still has 'weak' components in areas crucial to the supply of these resitors the percieved sound is not the whole truth of what that resistor is capable of?Are these percieved differences cos some resistors are better at certain frequencies, even though they claim to be unconditionally superior to other types?What about resitor tolerances, any effects of using tighter tolerences in key or all areas?Certainly you three dudes are adept at reading between the lines on these posts and also implying what you deem needs to be implied!ThanksRaj
Hi DVV,I didn't use the name of AA as a negative reference, I was merley ...
implying that there's loads of different opinoins on the same product, and trying to show whats happening from a designers point of view. Sorry about posting too many questions though. Certainly what youve said here
though DVV will help people not to fall victim to all this hype, which is of course one of the keys to this thread.ThanksRaj
Hi DVV, Thanks for the detailed response. But, my question was a little more basic. Let me ask it as simply as possible. The transistors are electronic valves which allow current to pass from the collector to the emitter as a function of the initial bias and the signal voltage at the base. 1. At idle (no signal) there is DC current flowing. Where is this current going? How does it not reach the speakers as DC? 2. Later, when there is an input signal, the base gets an AC voltage (the signal) and this translates to an audio signal (AC current) to the speakers. How can the initial bias current not reach the speakers, and the current generated when a signal is present does? 3. Class A vs Class A/B: My question here really is more about crossover distortion. To keep the same example, lets say bias is set to 150mA. At the zero point in the audio ac signal, when the one transistor supposedly turns off and hands off to the second device, is it ever really off? Being that there is a bias current flowing at the zero point, isn't the transistor on. So, where is the crossover distortion/switching noise coming from? Thanks again, Steve
Hi DVV,I didn't use the name of AA as a negative reference, I was merley implying that there's loads of different opinoins on the same product, and trying to show whats happening from a designers point of view. Sorry about posting too many questions though. Certainly what youve said here though DVV will help people not to fall victim to all this hype, which is of course one of the keys to this thread.ThanksRaj
Steve, you just asked for a complete theory of operation for semiconductrs in a few short sentences. This is something one usually needs years to understand, and after 34 years, I'm still not sure I understand it completely.
Ad 3. One of main advantages of high bias is that the crossover distortion is greatly reduced. As you quite rightly stated, the word is "reduced", not eliminated. Some residuals will still be there once the amp leaves the region of pure class A operation, i.e. when it goes into the classic AB mode. In the example I used, once the power demanded of it exceeds 2.9/5.8 W into 4/8 ohms.
once the power demanded of it exceeds 2.9/5.8 W into 4/8 ohms
QuoteSteve, you just asked for a complete theory of operation for semiconductrs in a few short sentences. This is something one usually needs years to understand, and after 34 years, I'm still not sure I understand it completely. Hi Dejan, See, that wasn't so bad was it?
So, just to emphasize (or clarify): 1. If you set some initial bias on the output transistors and didn't use any feedback or DC servo, you would have speaker damaging DC getting through. Am I correct in making this statement? Aren't some amps designed without feedback?
So, exactly what is crossover distortion? I had always heard that it was the distortion of a device turning on and off. But because of a bias setting, the device is never really off (in either class A or class A/B). Knowing this, I would then assume that crossover distortion doesn't have to do with a device going from conducting to not conducting. But rather has to do with a device going from hadling its portion of the audio signal to not handling its portion of the signal.
If I am correct in my previous statements. I am still confused as to how class A operation produces such small amount of crossover distorion as compared with class A/B? In your example aboveQuoteonce the power demanded of it exceeds 2.9/5.8 W into 4/8 ohmsin the low power range (class A), why are the lower power outputs yielding less crossover distortion? The devices are still handing off to one another. Sorry for the somewhat repetative nature of my questions. This is a subject that I have been contemplating for some time, and have never really been able to get a handle on. Your fantastic explanations have gotten me closer than ever to full understanding. One more little step, and I think I got it. Thanls a lot Dejan -- so far awsome, Steve