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I didn't know we were limiting the discussion of feedback to global feedback. I was referring to simple emitter degeneration, which is just a resistor at the transistor's emitter. In other words, it's local.
Not sure I follow. The only thing I cited from the paper was their saying that the notion of tubes clipping more softly than transistors was a myth.
** Of course. The point is that, in the real world, in real amplifiers, tubes and transistors have all kinds of important differences - many of them related to the fact that transistors *need* NFB in order to operate anything close to linearly.Well there's evidence that this is not necessarily the case when the comparisons are more apples to apples.But I still don't know what this has to do with crossover distortion.
**Of course. And in the real world, transistors need lots of feedback and tubes don't. Do you agree with that?Not necessarily, no. Again, there is evidence that when you run transistors at similar voltages to tubes, they virtually identical distortion characteristics as tubes. And in this comparison, while the overall distortion was a bit higher, it wasn't dramatically so.Also as I pointed out in a previous post, cascoding can dramatically linearize a transistor (or a tube for that matter) without using any negative feedback.
Ah, ok. Well suffice to say that I think the whole "single-ended characteristic of air" thing isn't really an argument. By the time we would start experiencing the single-ended characteristic of air, our eardrums would be slammed six inches into our skulls.
We weren't limiting the discussion at all. I was pointing out that, at the least, the very small-scale triode feedback - if it exists - is not exactly directly comparable to the global feedback almost always used to linearize SS circuits - which is what you originally implied unless I misunderstood.
So, I read the Hamm paper and now do have better context. Sorry about that.
You're correct that the article points this out, but it also points out that the distortion spectra at clipping of tubes is typically much friendlier than transistors. We could talk about a lot of things in the article, but overall the article rather heavily "favors tubes", as you know. A quote from the last section:'Vacuum-tube amplifiers differ from transistor and operational amplifiers because they can be operated in the overload region without adding objectionable distortion. The combination of the slow rising edge and the open harmonic structure of the overload characteristics form an almost ideal sound-recording compressor. Within the 15-20-dB "safe" overload range, the electrical output of the tube amplifier increases by only 2-4 dB, acting like a limiter. However, since the edge is increasing within this range, the subjective loudness remains uncompressed to the ear. This effect causes tube-amplified signals to have a high apparent level which is not indicated on a volume indicator (VU meter). Tubes sound louder and have a better signal-to-noise ratio because of this extra subjective head room that transistor amplifiers do not have.'But that's neither here nor there. Now I understand your original point better: that tubes and transistors *as output devices* are more similar than conventional wisdom says, but in practice transistors aren't implemented in ways that display this. Let me know if that is off the mark.
Nothing. That was a tangent. I thought for a moment you might be hinting at an "all amplifiers sound the same; a watt is a watt" type of argument, but I am sure you are much brighter than that.
Once again this is appearing to me as academic. If transistors can be run this way, and apparently operate better doing so, why does nobody do it? Why is it not happening in the real world?
I think you are the first person I've ever heard say that, in general, tubes don't require less negative feedback than transistors. I think just about every staunch proponent of sand amps would acknowledge that.
Anyway, this notion that transistors behave more like tubes (than thought) at higher voltages is truly very interesting, and new to me. Maybe there is something valuable there.
I'm not prepared to go there (at least not at the moment). It's been a long time since I've read that article. I found it very intriguing, if nothing else.