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As follow-ups please: In the emission frequency range you specified, can you say approximately what amount of EMI your amps (and to your knowledge, other manufacturers' switching amps) actually do emit? Is there any possibility (even remote) of any health impact or danger, from long term exposure to these emissions at close ranges?
Quote from: NewBuyer on 25 Jan 2009, 08:09 amAs follow-ups please: In the emission frequency range you specified, can you say approximately what amount of EMI your amps (and to your knowledge, other manufacturers' switching amps) actually do emit? Is there any possibility (even remote) of any health impact or danger, from long term exposure to these emissions at close ranges? Tommy will answer for his products specifically - I'll just post some general info...Class D amplifiers, along with ANY electronic component having oscillator operating above 9kHz, MUST comply with FCC imposed emission limits in the frequency range of 450kHz to 1GHz (450kHz to 30MHz for conducted emissions and 30MHz-1GHz for radiated emissions). In Europe, limit is 150kHz-1GHz (and 30MHz is a crossover between conducted and radiated emissions). This is for UNINTENDED radiators, not for radio stations, cell phones, etc. In practice, most switchmode power supplies and class D amps radiate in 100kHz-150MHz range.The actual limits for household equipment are more stringent than for industrial equipment. Now - the primary goal of the regulations is to prevent harmful effects on other electronic equipment (in Europe the equipment must have a certain level of immunity to electrical and magnetic fields). I am not aware of any regulation or study discussing harmful effects on humans. However, allowed emission levels are much lower than your typical cordless or cell phone, wireless router, etc.Boris
Quote from: mfsoa on 21 Dec 2008, 06:52 pmAnd since I've already blapped more than I should I can tell you guys that he is intimately familiar with the operation of the UcD and ICE modules, and feels absolutely confidant that his designs are superior in both theory and implementation.Would very much like to hear how exactly his designs better the UcD in theory and implementation....
And since I've already blapped more than I should I can tell you guys that he is intimately familiar with the operation of the UcD and ICE modules, and feels absolutely confidant that his designs are superior in both theory and implementation.
...AC power lines are on the top of the list, even though the frequencies are low. Next comes your cell phone...
Quote from: AmpDesigner333 on 26 Jan 2009, 10:47 pm...AC power lines are on the top of the list, even though the frequencies are low. Next comes your cell phone...Thanks Tommy and Boris for the info regarding the radiation type/frequencies that these switching amps emit. Tommy, just to reiterate my above question please: In the emission frequency range you specified for your amps, can you say approximately what amount of EMI radiation your amps actually do emit?
I can't show plots due to an NDA with a customer. The emissions are low with respect to other amplifier designs...
Quote from: AmpDesigner333 on 28 Jan 2009, 12:22 amI can't show plots due to an NDA with a customer. The emissions are low with respect to other amplifier designs...No plots is fine... could you at least say please what the max values are, that your amps ever emit?
Quote from: NewBuyer on 28 Jan 2009, 12:31 amQuote from: AmpDesigner333 on 28 Jan 2009, 12:22 amI can't show plots due to an NDA with a customer. The emissions are low with respect to other amplifier designs...No plots is fine... could you at least say please what the max values are, that your amps ever emit? I'll send you an answer via PM... Thanks again.
There are a few key differences. For one, UCD takes feedback after the filter which allows less phase margin and relies on the capacitance of the output to control the modulation. There is also more than a decade of R&D behind the Digital Amp Co. methods involving much more than the general topology of the amp. We use innovation in our modulation method, component selection, and practical implementation matters (layout, partitioning, etc.).Sorry this can't go to the "exactly" level without divulging some "secret sauce" info. We believe UCD is one of our more worthy competitors, and we have the greatest respect for Bruno P who created the technology. I'd like to hear some more opinions from people who have heard both, preferably in an A/B comparison. So far, we have heard that the Cherry and DAC4800A sound better all around, but keep in mind the speakers, source, power output, and setup can make all the difference.Thanks for your post!
The Ucd uses feedback, your amp doesn't, we know that. Why is yours better from a theoretical standpoint? I am guessing the UcD has much better distortion specs, which in theory, should make it superior.
Quote from: cabThe Ucd uses feedback, your amp doesn't, we know that. Why is yours better from a theoretical standpoint? I am guessing the UcD has much better distortion specs, which in theory, should make it superior.I've never owned a class D amp of any kind (mostly due to a lack of opportunity), but did just read an interesting article by Nelson Pass on negative feedback and the value of distortion specs as currently reported by most manufacturers:http://www.6moons.com/industryfeatures/distortion/distortion.html(I certainly wouldn't claim anyone is an authority over anyone else, but Nelson Pass certainly has a lot of experience in this area...)As a general point, keep in mind that electromagnetic radiation follows an inverse square law, meaning that if you double the distance from the amp, the EM drops by a factor of 4. Triple the distance, and it drops by a factor of 9, etc.. While I certainly like the idea of minimizing EMI as a general concept and pay attention to such things myself, I focus much more on the cell phone that I hold next to my head rather than components located some distance away from me when operating.(That said, I'd be curious to see the EMI numbers more generally reported by amp manufacturers as well, if for no other reason than to let me know ahead of time whether I'd be forced to use shielded ICs.)
I think what Tommy is trying to say is that his feedback is taken before the output filter rather than after, not that it doesn't use feedback. As long as the output filter is of high quality, it will contribute very little distortion of its own. In tube amplifiers, for example, it is most common to take feedback after the output transformer - but stability gains can be had by taking it before, with comparable distortion-reduction.
Only class D amps with high switching freqs are a problem for EM pollution.
Quote from: richidooOnly class D amps with high switching freqs are a problem for EM pollution.... although I can't think of any shipping amps offhand that use this configuration) while many class D (switching) amps use a linear power supply....
Only class D amps with high switching freqs are a problem for EM pollution. Bryston does not make class D amps.