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Peter Mcalister (of Mcalister Audio) told me he believes self-biasing tube amplifiers sound worse than those with fixed bias.
Edcor makes inexpensive iron up to 100w. Hammond makes some decent iron. James, Electraprint, O'netics (Level I maybe II), Silk and some of Lundahl & Magnequest are all in the medium price range. Tamura, Hashimoto, Lundahl amorphous, Magnequest's higher lines, O'netics (level II/III) are alll getting quite pricey.
Class A to me is a pure waste.
Class AB is extremely efficient and is able to sound as good as class A.
When tubes are transistors are biased for efficiency correctly, there is very little heat output.
Lower heat also means longer component life. Tubes can be made to auto bias as well. Prima Luna has a neat bias system and there are other methods as well.
From the Mcalister site..."Fixed Bias and Self Automatic biasing Explained;Cathode/ automatic/ self biasing amplifiers use a large resistor impedance between the cathodes of the output tubes to ground. This raises the cathodes above the ground potential in effect creating the required negative grid number one voltage on the output tubes that determines the current flow and class of operation. Amplifiers with this type of bias do not require any adjustments when output tubes are replaced and are less expensive to the manufacture as no additional negative power supply or controls are required- just a cathode resistor and by-pass capacitor. With cathode biased amplifiers the speed and rise times are much slower due to the large value cathode resistor that is in series with the audio output. Further a large value electrolytic cap in parallel with this cathode resistor has to be used for a shunt AC path ground return and impedance reduction. Electrolytic capacitors in the signal path further degrade the sound quality. Fixed negative bias supplies connect the output tube cathode to ground and have an additional negative voltage power supply. The negative voltage is adjustable and fed to the control grid of the output tube that determines the current flow and class of operation."Not saying this is 100% accurate, just sharing an opinion.
I love tube amps. I hate biasing tube amps.
Good quality output transformers, especially higher powered ones are quite expensive. If you in into cheap chinese iron (not all bad mind you) then made it can be done more competitively.
QuoteGood quality output transformers, especially higher powered ones are quite expensive. If you in into cheap chinese iron (not all bad mind you) then made it can be done more competitively. Good iron is the heart of any tube product. There is so much more to transformers than the 'average' person recognizes. Mains transformers can make or break a tube product in terms of noise floor. A good mains transformer designed for the specific application with proper shielding will provide a much quieter presentation than most off the shelf pieces. When prototyping and designing our Purity preamp, I tried a few off the shelf transformers. Most performed at a decent level but none reached the level of performance we required. There are some very good off the shelf units out there but you can not always obtain the parameters you require for a particular application. Having transformers customer designed for the unit was the only way we could obtain our design goals. The headroom increased and the noise floor dropped considerably. Output transformers-------- Yes, good output devices can be very expensive. When you are looking at manufacturers like Hammond and the likes, they make decent products but none I have seen have the bandwidth required to produce a full range output. Most standard output transformers are rated at only 30Hz. This is fine if your system and speakers are not capable of full range but why purchase a true full range speaker if your amplifier cannot deliver You can often judge the quality of a good output transformer by it's weight compared to it's rated power output. If you took an average off the shelf rated at 100 watts output, let's use a hammond for example, and a high quality unit designed for full output, you will see a difference in weight alone of several pounds. We have been through this as well with the R&D on our new mono blocs. We had to go back to having custom transformers design to meet our goals. So yes, good tube amps can be expensive. Sometimes it is truly a matter of "you get what you pay for". I won't get into solid state because I honestly do not know enough about the design to comment. I do know that quality solid state watts are much cheaper than equivalent tube watts but some for some of us there simply is no substitution for tubes.
The Ultrapath design is really nice! That's based on a great design philosophy. Class AB can sound just as good as Class A (to my ears), especially if its using a circuit designed without loop feedback. I would caution against stereotyping push-pull amplifiers. There are many,many implementations of that kind of circuit and the outcomes are all different. It has the most potential because there's no power limiting factor since multiple output tubes can be used.
BTW: Did you know there's a push-pull amplifier design that doesn't use a phase splitter? It works by allowing the power tubes to equalize each other through a cathode resistor. The non-driven power tube is referenced to ground and is cathode driven. http://www.triodeel.com/compact.html