0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 29256 times.
Let's change subject slightly and ask: Why are high voltage lines so thin? Because the higher the voltage, the less current is required. There are fewer losses at higher voltages and cables also will sag less and run much cooler. Typically HT lines can be as high as 500KV, half a million Volts.True or false, voltage does not compress, current does? Yes! The current is the problem.Is this why many of us love valve amps? Does valve amps have superior and more natural dynamics because they are high voltage and low current devices.Believe me when I say that is much easier to mess up power supplies in transistor amps that it is in tube amps. Typically voltages in tube amps are up to ten times higher than transistor amps and that means up to one-tenth the current.Also, because AC is converted to DC, in typical power supplies the peak current drawn out of the transformer can be 7-10 times higher than the current required by the amplifier. So if the speaker requires 5 Amps, then the peak current drawn in your power transformer can be 30 to 50 Amps. AC has gaps in the power delivery, the power supply's reservoir capacitors in-rush current has to compensate. Yes, current is the problem.Current equals dynamic compression unless very close attention is paid to it. Tubes are less prone to compression.
I really don't care why or even if tubes sound better. I just know they sound better to me.
I have a different interpretation. I think that harmonics that occur naturally in life are stripped out during the recording process, which kills the "life" of the recording, and that tube gear restores some of that stripped out life
Erm....Please, ladies and gentlemen, no arguments about tubes vs. solid-state, both have a place in our audio universe and I own both.But I'll continue. Personally, I feel that it music is not meant to be sterile. All professional pianists can play the same music, but its what they add that makes their performances special, its the way they play the music. I feel like the tubes are just 'playing' the music, adding to it, without taking anything away.-West