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Not nearly as over the top as I'd have expected from a tube amp manufacturer.
The (potential) technical advantages (less electronics required, direct digital stream fed to the output) would seem worth exploiting.
Found this link while surfing, and thought it would be a good topic for discussion (assuming we keep it respectful). Post your views, and let's see what we can learn.
The problem with the piece as I see it is that neither of the two reasons he gives for tubes sounding better than transistors (that transistors can't be operated without feedback and that transistor circuits require more capacitors in the signal path) are true.
How many people here are believers in hybrids (a little of both)?
...click on 'articles' and scroll down to part 2 in Freo's link.
The Monad looks very interesting.Just curious, does it use the 300B as a driver for a solid state output stage?That sound very cool.How do they claim the 300B NEVER wears out? I know that the WE 300B's aresupposed to go 40 thousand hours, so thats pretty close.I want to get one of these for review. It sounds really interesting.
The Monad looks very interesting.
Quote from: WEEZ on 6 Oct 2007, 03:20 pm...click on 'articles' and scroll down to part 2 in Freo's link.More mythology:In a tube, clipping is completely different. Since a tube works by passing electrons from a cathode through a charged screen to a plate by way of different electrical potentials, there is no such thing as "clipping" as we've come to know it through this discussion.This is complete nonsense. Fundamentally a transistor works no differently than a tube. You can just as well say that a transistor works by passing electrons from an emitter/source through a charged base/gate to a collector/drain by way of different electrical potentials.The tube never shuts off, and never puts DC on the voice coil. It never creates an unnatural flat line at the top of musical peaks. What happens is more like a bucket (the plate) being filled with water (electrons). When the plate is saturated there is no longer a potential difference - so, no more electrons are accepted on the plate until there is room made on the plate by the dissipation of those electrons. Instead of clipping, a form of compression occurs as the difference between the continuous power and peak power are reduced.Still more mythology. A transistor works no differently.The differences between the even order harmonic distortion tubes generate and odd order harmonic distortion that solid state amplifiers generate are profound.And it just keeps coming.A single-ended tube circuit will produce predominantly even order harmonics. A single-ended transistor circuit will also produce predominantly even order harmonics.A push-pull transistor circuit will produce predominantly odd order harmonics. A push-pull tube circuit will also produce predominantly odd order harmonics.se
They're monoblocks, so it's best to get two. (sorry, couldn't resist )
Holy harmonics Batman! I've always heard that solid state produced odd order harmonics, and tube even order harmonics.Does this mean that it was always an oversimplification, or misleading representation of tubes vs solid state?
Quote from: Double Ugly on 6 Oct 2007, 04:57 pmThey're monoblocks, so it's best to get two. (sorry, couldn't resist )Nor can I resist saying what a nice pair of Monads you've got there. se
Quote from: Freo-1 on 6 Oct 2007, 03:16 amThe (potential) technical advantages (less electronics required, direct digital stream fed to the output) would seem worth exploiting.I agree. The connection chain you described is odd IME (understatement, no? ), but I'd love to have been there to hear it!I'm toying with the idea of buying a dedicated iMac for use in my room. It'd replace the first two pieces of the far-removed computer (HDD --> wireless router) --> modified Transporter --> amps --> speaker set-up I have now. I'd love to be directly wired at all points, but the computer noise potential worries me. Even so, the myriad of interesting experiments and comparisons via different types of connectors and outputs I could perform intrigues me greatly!