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Ah, Churchianity, I love it. We have it in Oz too, and it's BIG BUSINESS, preaching that wealth and ostentation is God's reward to a hard working, entrepreneurial flock...I think Man is always looking for ideas to which he can hitch his star, and for which often he will fight to the death. The most recent has been the failed 70 year social experiment which crashed in 1989 - a great concept, but not the answer...
NAKSA Measured PerformanceMeasured peformance for audio amplifiers is a highly contentious issue, with often acrimonious debate between the objectivists, who say human senses are inconsistent, and the subjectivists, who insist that ‘how it sounds’ is the only valid test. Like so much in technology, and indeed life, the reality probably lies somewhere between the two extremes.Distortion measurements are based on a single sinusoidal test tone, usually at 1KHz. This input test bears little resemblance to music, of course, which is polytonal and much more susceptible to intermodulation effects between the tones. A single tone is a very easy test for an audio amplifier, liable to give flattering results.Aspen believes that the human hearing system, and this includes the brain which processes the output from the ears, is very acute indeed at discerning odd order harmonics. In fact, even order harmonics, the second, fourth, sixth, etc, are perceived to be musical, with many scales, notably the Western Major scale, emphasising and exploiting even order harmonics. Scales such as the pentatonic (the major scale of China and Mongolia) and the slendro (the Javanese Gamelan scale) are disharmonious, and tend not to rely on even order harmonics. These scales sound markedly different to the usual major scales, and are, by Western standards, an ‘acquired taste’. Aspen believes it is these subtleties which underlie our apprehension of a musical amplifier or otherwise, and therefore the nature and quantity of the distortion artefacts from audio amplifiers bears directly on human aural perception.The vast majority of modern solid state amplifiers produce a harmonic spectrum where, after the often prominent second harmonic (musical), the odd order artefacts dominate, usually 5-10dB above the evens. This results in the oft described ‘sterile, mechanical’ rendition. There are also other important factors, such as the length of the harmonic spectrum and the decay of notes, but essentially high feedback amplifiers produce a long string of artefacts at very low levels which continue until at least the 15th harmonic and often further. The higher order odd artefacts are vanishingly low, but there is some evidence that the ear can detect these tiny sounds and register them subliminally as ‘non-musical’. The listener is strangely discomforted by such a presentation, and listener fatigue results, negating any ‘engagement’ (emotional connection) between the listener and the recording.The NAKSA was designed specifically not for vanishingly low distortion, but for even harmonics predominating over odd. This is achieved by single ended circuitry wherever possible, both global and interstage feedback, and an asymmetrical output stage, which offers the efficiency of Class AB operation with the distortion profile of a single ended amplifier. The following measurements were taken by Dr Graham Huon of Huon Labs, Waverley, Victoria on 8th July 2010 using the Audiomatica program Clio, a PC-based high accuracy distortion analyser.70W per channel NAKSA power amp: Results at 14.14Vrms, 20Vp, 25W into 8R at 1KHz:H2 -72dB H3 -79dB H4 -79.5dBH5 -84dB H6 -83dB H7 UnmeasureableH8 -86dB H9 -87dB H10 -85dBThis sums to a THD of 0.0404%, 91% of it H2, H3 and H4. At 1W output, 2.83Vrms, THD is 0.008%, of which H2, H3 and H4 comprise 0.005%. The profile of this distortion is monotonically decreasing.These are good results, particularly at very low powers where the crossover event of Class AB amplifiers normally greatly increases distortion. These figures give some credibility to the notion that a good sounding amplifier will have an impressive distortion spectrum.
I will be doing so today & will post pics & report.
Review review!! (Hi John!, are still playing with the ESS9022?)