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You guys aren't actually reading what I've written. An engineer/designer can alter the circuit topography of his amp to make it sound like a tube amp. If he can do that, it means there's no magic to tube design. It also means that the data can describe sound.
If I may put the other side of the argument... (You didn't think this thread was going to end there did you!?) Existing measurement techniques support the fact that SS amps are more accurate than valves. If anyone has information to the contrary I would love to read it.If you are saying valves sound better to you I am just fine with that. If you are saying valves are more accurate but in an unknown way, maybe you can win the Nobel prize by figuring out what that way is. Until then you're not able to rely on, or even hide behind, any figures.Darren
So, what does it mean to be 'accurate'? It's tempting to put aside the perceptual element since it's so intractable, but unfortunately it's really the only important part. The perceptual coding guys have pretty much proven that - 320k VBR compresion throws away 75+% of the raw signal (and even 50+% of the entropy measured information) and yet still retains something pretty darn close to audibly transparent. It's absolutely horrible from any simple technical measure, but yet very 'accurate'.
If I may put the other side of the argument... (You didn't think this thread was going to end there did you!?) Existing measurement techniques support the fact that SS amps are more accurate than valves. If anyone has information to the contrary I would love to read it.If you are saying valves sound better to you I am just fine with that. If you are saying valves are more accurate but in an unknown way, maybe you can win the Nobel prize by figuring out what that way is. Until then you're not able to rely on, or even hide behind, any figures.I already said if you like valves then fine. The issue then becomes, if someone with golden ears or a manufacturer says valve amps are better in some sort of objective way (not measurable) should I believe him/her? This is where I would say prove it with some kind of blind test. Without a blind test I will file claims of superiority under "live and let live". With a blind test, I will file claims of superiority under "has been shown - and measurements be damned!".Blind testing is a pain in the butt but it's all we've got for nailing the placebo effect. Again, if you figure out an easier way to let people listen without bias, you could get yourself a Nobel prize. As I said the problem is only a thorny one for people like reviewers or manufacturers since what anyone prefers in the privacy of their own home is nobody else's business. But we are discussing more than that when we talk about the Benchmark vs modders etc.Darren
Sure. Not exactly the same, but John Atkinson measured my Lamm preamp and found it exemplary. Of course, I paid more attention to the listening notes. Dan Wright makes some tubed preamps that measure great. I'm sure there are others.Of course, JA also measured my Yamamoto SET amp and practically thought it was broken. I love the sound of it, like just about everyone else that has on the right speakers.
Yes, it's an endless debate, but apparently adc doesn't realize that. Acd - you are not the first to wade in to the audio world claiming specs and science have 'solved' the audio reproduction problem.
People were probably doing that back in the 60's. Whether you intend it this way or not, the basic upshot of your position is this:"I know everything there is to know about the human auditory system"Sounds like a statement that might be overreaching *just* a bit.
To address one specific example:Quote from: acd483 on 26 Oct 2007, 01:08 pmYou guys aren't actually reading what I've written. An engineer/designer can alter the circuit topography of his amp to make it sound like a tube amp. If he can do that, it means there's no magic to tube design. It also means that the data can describe sound.Sounds great, except that it's wrong in that it presupposes it's own conclusion. Tube amps differ from solid state amps in MANY ways, not just the shape of the transfer function. They have different output impedance characteristics. They have different distortion levels AS WELL AS spectral distribution. They have different saturation/overload characteristics. The output xformer introduces different bandwidth constraints. They'll almost certainly have different EMI/RFI signatures and sensitivities. Furthermore, all of this may change with frequency and/or absolute reproduction level. So, exactly which of those is responsible for 'tube sound'? We don't know, and it's impossible for an SS amp to simultaneously match a tube amp in all of these aspects. Certainly things like the Zen amps seem to have similar characteristics to simple tube topologies, but even then there are differences.
So, no - there is no 'magic'. There isn't any 'ether' through which the 'soul' of the music travels independent of the electrical circuits. But the truth is that it's a heck of a lot harder to identify which characteristics of that signal correspond to 'music' than it first appears, and thus it's fiendishly difficult to account for what listeners report that they hear.
Having said all that, I have to wonder whether this is at least partially a troll. Someone that sells artistic goods on their web site (which at a quick glance actually look pretty cool) and owns an RWA amp doesn't strike me as the typical profile for someone advancing the 'numbers are everything' argument.
Once I heard a nice quote. "By the age of 40 you've managed to surround yourself with people who agree with you."It's good that we can all coexist and challenge each other - even if we don't change our minds. It makes life more interesting.Darren
Quote from: darrenyeats on 26 Oct 2007, 04:14 pmIf I may put the other side of the argument... (You didn't think this thread was going to end there did you!?) Existing measurement techniques support the fact that SS amps are more accurate than valves. If anyone has information to the contrary I would love to read it.If you are saying valves sound better to you I am just fine with that. If you are saying valves are more accurate but in an unknown way, maybe you can win the Nobel prize by figuring out what that way is. Until then you're not able to rely on, or even hide behind, any figures.DarrenI don't have time for a full reply right now, but I'll throw some thoughts out there. I certainly don't have any 'answers' - just speculation and ideas.I'm at the point that I think we need to consider what 'accuracy' means. Audio reproduction is not a 1-dimensional problem, and the perception of audio/music is not only multi-dimensional but the dimensions are not even obvious. Even taking a 'simple' metric like THD interpreting it is tough - audibility of harmonic distortion depends on a lot of factors - order of the distortion, frequency of the fundamental, absolute playback level, AND the musical content of the signal due to masking phenomena.So, what does it mean to be 'accurate'? It's tempting to put aside the perceptual element since it's so intractable, but unfortunately it's really the only important part. The perceptual coding guys have pretty much proven that - 320k VBR compresion throws away 75+% of the raw signal (and even 50+% of the entropy measured information) and yet still retains something pretty darn close to audibly transparent. It's absolutely horrible from any simple technical measure, but yet very 'accurate'.So, my feeling is that we need to start thinking in 'perceptual space' rather than 'technical space'. AND we have to stop thinking 'steady state' and start thinking 'musically'. In a nutshell, what I think we need to do is 'invert' the lossy perceptual coding idea to try to measure system deviations against these perceptual dimensions. This is inherently a time-varying problem though, so we end up with a multi-dimensional time-varying error signal which we somehow have to integrate into a 'score'. Not easy
according to published specs, the distortion on my tubed preamp is 0.15% - low enuff for me...speakers have distortion so many orders of magnitude higher than even tubed gear, it seems any decently designed component - tubed or solid state, shouldn't have distortion as its stumbling block...
doug s said Quoteaccording to published specs, the distortion on my tubed preamp is 0.15% - low enuff for me...speakers have distortion so many orders of magnitude higher than even tubed gear, it seems any decently designed component - tubed or solid state, shouldn't have distortion as its stumbling block... I think doug s has been misinformed as to the magnitude of distortion present in loudspeakers. Here is a link to a website with independent distortion measurements of a large number loudspeaker drivers http://www.zaphaudio.com/ and a link to a THD to dB conversion calculator http://www.sengpielaudio.com/calculator-thd.htm Some drivers are a little worse, some are better in distortion measurements than doug s preamp.Scotty