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Years ago, as a musician, I experienced the difference between effects boxes being powered by batteries vs AC adaptors in my guitar rig. Batteries ruled in terms of sonics, but the practicality of AC adaptors won out in live situations. In the studio however, batteries won out, when sound mattered most.
Although this a bit of a oversimplification, an amp is nothing more than a modulating power supply. It only stands to reason then, that as goes the power supply, so goes the sound of the amplifier.
So what to look for in a power supply? Batteries are reasonably quiet and don’t have any mains interference issues. Unfortunately, unless you use a rather large car battery, like the Optima Red Top battery, the power supply impedance will be fairly high and possibly frequency dependant depending on the battery construction. This means that any load current fluctuations across the battery impedance will generate a voltage on the battery terminals. This will modulate the audio signal as explained above.
Hi Daygloworange,How are you keeping?
The capacitor impedance characteristics will be in parallel with the battery impedance characteristics and the resultant impedance will be lower. However, the sonic signature of the capacitor has to be considered in the equation. All capacitors I have looked at have non-linear impedance characteristics and most have bad dielectric absorbsion problems. This makes the whole issue of matching and countering battery impedance deviations rather tricky. If you know of a capacitor with a flat impedance curve in the milliohm range and with low delectric absorbsion factor, I would be pleased to know about it. It would certainly make my life easier.
The simple answer is check out the impedance and PSRR over your required operating bandwidth, the transient response and settling time and the noise specification. The regulator that offers the best specification with these parameters is going to give you the best audio performance.
As far as I am concerned “non linear impedance characteristics” of a power supply means it does not have a flat impedance curve over the required operating bandwidth.
I’m well aware of the impedance curve variations of capacitors and my statement “If you know of a capacitor with a flat impedance curve in the milliohm range and with low dielectric absorbsion factor, I would be pleased to know about it. It would certainly make my life easier.” was a joke. If it did exist I wouldn’t need to design regulated power supplies.
If you add the capacitor shown in your example to any power supply it would have a non-linear effect on the resultant impedance curve.
This would mean that the power supply would have different levels of interaction with the load at different frequencies.
Dielectric absorbsion in electrolytic capacitors is quite high. For those who are not aware of this phenomenon, ac signal current fluctuations across the capacitor electrodes induce a variable charge storage in the insulation (dielectric), which is released after the signal current has passed. This changes the envelope of the waveform corrupting the signal.
Personally, in my domestic sound system, I prefer to reduce power supply interaction to the lowest possible levels.
This reduces signal/power supply inter-modulation and masking of low level information allowing more of the music through.
Perhaps I didn’t explain my thoughts as clearly as I could have done. It was late when I replied to your post (around 1.30am) after an extended weekend of partying at a family gathering. I’m still suffering the aftermath due to lack of sleep, but I will try to be a little more lucid but as briefly as possible as I have a backlog of work to catch up with.
Maybe we differ over our definitions of linear but I see it as meaning a straight line. If the impedance plot varies from a straight line I feel justified in describing it as non-linear.
I have tried the multiple bypass approach with a wide range of capacitors and, whilst it can make very audible differences, I have never been happy with the tonal aberrations this technique can cause.