Woke up thinking about this today, output impedance of linear ss amps v. switchers. Curious to hear that Spectron...
Let's say a tube amp with a good transformer has output impedance of 1 ohms. A bipolar SS amp has outputZ of 0.1 ohm. And a switching amp has outputZ of .01 ohm. Let's say speaker load is relatively flat around 4 to 8 ohms and a decent quality, short length speaker wire with minimal reactance.
It is usually obvious to hear the difference between the tube amps and the linear SS amp in damping control, with output Z is ~10x lower. Bass is tighter, cleaner, more impact, etc.
But how 'bout comparing the linear SS amp at 0.1 ohm to the switcher at 0.01 ohm? Still 10x lower again, but now the absolute magnitude of the difference is also 10x smaller than with the tube/linear. So is the difference in damping with linear/switcher just as audible as the difference heard between tube and bipolar output stage? What matters more, the impedance ratio which is increased 10x, or the absolute impedance, which has only decreased by ~1/10ohm. I guess they are the same in essence, but what is proper way to view it? Ratio, I bet...
Are these awesome specs for switching amps really significant? Or is typical SS output impedance close to the peak of the audible benefit?
People continue to rave about switchers' great bass performance, even compared to good ss amps. Is lower output Z a major reason why?
Thanks - and TGIF, have a great weekend everybody!
Rich