0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 21544 times.
The discusson on technical measurements may be moot. Preliminary listening on my big system is very favorable. More later.
It would be great to get viewpoints from some of our amp designers like Curt, Frank, Hugh, and DVV. Do any of you guys have any thoughts, concerns, fears about this technology apparently coming of age?
IMO switching amplifiers are not ready for the audiophile market. They get our attention as an exciting new technology but I think when all is said and done most of us will still be using analog amplifiers in our two channel systems from some time to come. Switchers, today, are just not good enough to compete with the best analog amplifier designs.A good analog amplifier has a noise floor ~20dB lower than a switcher and has about 10X less THD, those are two important issues. Remember, an audiophile is t ...
Curt: the extra information regarding the digital amplifier technology is appreciated. As engineering goes it seems to me that it usually takes more than a few years to work out all of the problems. An RF transmitter is not needed in my system. The sound though may trump the drawbacks. I'm surprised that if the noise floor is 20db higher on these amps that it would be tolerable. Is this correct?
Try it, you'll like it.Specifics will be on our website. I will post the link when ready.Sincerely,Your friends at Carver Pro
Here are the manufacturer's specs for the Acoustic Reality eAR Two ICEpower amp:Max. power output (RMS) 2 x 500W / 4Ω, 2 x 250W / 8Ω Power stage efficiency > 93%, 200W / 8Ω (only ICEpower) Peak output current >80A (peak power into 0.6 ohm = 5500 Watt) Output impedance 2mΩ @ 1kHz Dynamic range (A-weighted) >117dB THD+N < 0.009% 100W @ 8 ohms Linearity 10Hz - 20kHz: +- 0,2dB Bandwidth 5Hz - 70kHz Input sensitivity (full output) 2V RMS ...[/quot These measurements reflect the use of AES 17 filter which rejects noise above 20kHz at something like 60db/oct. If other digital amps were measured using this method similar figures might be generated.
It's nice just to filter out the bad and improve your THD+N spec. Too bad most users don't listen with one of those filters on their amp.It's true some of the high freq garbage can effect the lower frequencies and the AC power, it should be removed for normal listening too, not just for the spec mesurments.You would think an amp should be measured just the way its to be used.
I, for one, like the fact that Brian took the initiative to attempt independent testing, and that Carver saw fit to respond. Maybe this will result in even better information.This is another example of why this forum is so great. If we can keep our diagreements civil and maintain respect for one another, the Audiocircle will continue to blossum.It would be great to get viewpoints from some of our amp designers like Curt, Frank, Hugh, and DVV. Do any of you guys have any thoughts, concerns, fears about this technology apparently coming of age?
I recently read an article by a professor of psychoacoustics. He's one of the "if you can't measure it you can't hear it" people. His testing indicates that some individuals can indeed detect frequencies well above the 20khz point. Wish I could find the article but if memory serves me correct he stated they'd tested as high as 35-40 khz.