Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Is anyone aware of an objective and repeatable comparison between a
valve amplifier and a reasonable transitor amplifier, operating well away from clipping, where the difference was significant and overwhelmingly in favour of the valve amplifier. To be useful the valve amplifier would need to be relatively cheap and use currently manufactured parts. The speakers would need to be fairly common and not present a difficult load. The source would need to be accurate and repeatable. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
One of the problems with objectivty from the cost stand point is that Tubes
amps are no long mass made--hence the price is much higher. If you compare hand made transistor amps--their price is relativly similar to (hand made) tube amps--leaving aside the top end insanity. "andy" wrote in message oups.com... Is anyone aware of an objective and repeatable comparison between a valve amplifier and a reasonable transitor amplifier, operating well away from clipping, where the difference was significant and overwhelmingly in favour of the valve amplifier. To be useful the valve amplifier would need to be relatively cheap and use currently manufactured parts. The speakers would need to be fairly common and not present a difficult load. The source would need to be accurate and repeatable. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 21 Apr 2005 16:59:32 -0700, "andy" wrote:
Is anyone aware of an objective and repeatable comparison between a valve amplifier and a reasonable transitor amplifier, operating well away from clipping, where the difference was significant and overwhelmingly in favour of the valve amplifier. This is an utterly pointless question. For there to be *any* difference, one of the amps must be audibly distorting. Most SS amps don't do this, so the odds are that you'll be hearing valve amp artifacts if there is an audible difference. These are typically euphonic, i.e. 'nice' even though inaccurate, so there may well be an expressed *preference* for the tube amp. However, this has nothing to do with fidelity to the source, where you want *zero* audible differences. What was the point of your question, and what did you mean by 'in favour of the valve amplifier'? To be useful the valve amplifier would need to be relatively cheap and use currently manufactured parts. The speakers would need to be fairly common and not present a difficult load. Why? Utility is not related to cost, and the ability to drive tough speaker loads is definitely a useful feature. The source would need to be accurate and repeatable. CD. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
andy wrote:
Is anyone aware of an objective and repeatable comparison between a valve amplifier and a reasonable transitor amplifier, operating well away from clipping, where the difference was significant and overwhelmingly in favour of the valve amplifier. To be useful the valve amplifier would need to be relatively cheap and use currently manufactured parts. The speakers would need to be fairly common and not present a difficult load. The source would need to be accurate and repeatable. Yea,here in my room... (Okay,this is by no means anything definitive....but... ) I have a Sansui AU-7900 amp,which I've used for a while,and loved (still do). Built like a tank,and sounds great for a SS amp,IMO. Well regarded in it's day. (80Wpc,IIRC.) Then,I rebuilt a small 6V6 PP amp from a console,with (mostly) new parts.(couple resistors I reused in the PS CRC for the input stage,they were still right-on,and the can-cap is still in great shape.) Pretty 'generic' little amp,but it blows the Sansui out of the water,and I -really- like the Sansui. The 6V6 amp makes ~8Wpc,both channels driven,I measured ~10W one channel driven.) The OPT's are kinda small,and I'm sure the PS caps could be bumped up a bit...like I said,pretty 'generic' little amp. I hate to say it,But I think this little amp even sounds slightly better than my Dyna ST70-(and it rocks my socks!) Of course,the ST70 has ~4 times as much power. The speakers I have were homebrewed,about 20 years ago by my father. They're great sounding 3-ways,a little on the power-hungry/inefficient side though. They use a Phillips/Becker woofer and mid,and a Peerless dome tweeter.Second Order passive x-overs. I nearly wet my pants the first time I listened to the small tube amp.. I've compared it to a couple SS amps,(couple Sansui's,an older Onkyo,a newer Pioneer,and something else I forgot.) And a few Tube amps,ST70,SE 6V6,couple SE 6BQ5 monoblocks,and a few homebrewed setups.. Nothing too "high end" or impressive,but decent.. To my ears,the small PP 6V6 tube amp wins everytime,hands down. It's damn impressive for a cheaply produced,"common" type of amp. The only complaint I have about it is,that sometimes the high treble can seem a bit "harsh"..perhaps I need to tweak the feedback values a bit,or maybe thats just 'the nature of the beast'..can't expect everything from those small OPT's.But,if i've been able to overlook it for this long,I guess it isn't that bad,and the rest of the sound surely makes up for it. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Stewart Pinkerton wrote: On 21 Apr 2005 16:59:32 -0700, "andy" wrote: Is anyone aware of an objective and repeatable comparison between a valve amplifier and a reasonable transitor amplifier, operating well away from clipping, where the difference was significant and overwhelmingly in favour of the valve amplifier. This is an utterly pointless question. And Stewpid Oinkerton is an utterly pointless poster at r.a.t. Go sell you pork chops elsewhere. I'll just warn anyone new to our group that engaging in a "discussion" with Oinko about whether tubes do music better than transistors will only end in a flame war and a lotta BS since Oinko openly thinks tubes have no place and are **** for hi-fi. He's a hater. And yes, I am aware of many occasions where a whole group of ppl unaminously thought triodes did better with music despite measurements indicating otherwise. But to know, you must conduct your own test. You won't be wiser arguing about it with Oinkerton. Patrick Turner. For there to be *any* difference, one of the amps must be audibly distorting. Most SS amps don't do this, so the odds are that you'll be hearing valve amp artifacts if there is an audible difference. These are typically euphonic, i.e. 'nice' even though inaccurate, so there may well be an expressed *preference* for the tube amp. However, this has nothing to do with fidelity to the source, where you want *zero* audible differences. What was the point of your question, and what did you mean by 'in favour of the valve amplifier'? To be useful the valve amplifier would need to be relatively cheap and use currently manufactured parts. The speakers would need to be fairly common and not present a difficult load. Why? Utility is not related to cost, and the ability to drive tough speaker loads is definitely a useful feature. The source would need to be accurate and repeatable. CD. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
For there to be *any* difference, one of the amps must be audibly
distorting. Most SS amps don't do this, A reasonable design, operating within the linear region and driving a benign load perhaps. Do all transistor amplifers sound the same driving 1 ohm loudspeakers? so the odds are that you'll be hearing valve amp artifacts if there is an audible difference. These are typically euphonic, i.e. 'nice' even though inaccurate, so there may well be an expressed *preference* for the tube amp. The study of this would be the point of the exercise. However, this has nothing to do with fidelity to the source, where you want *zero* audible differences. Ideally one would want this as an option. What was the point of your question, and what did you mean by 'in favour of the valve amplifier'? To compare a transistor and valve amplifier where the former is working in as linear a manner as practicable but there is a strong preference for the sound of the latter. |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the reply but I was looking for something that could be
repeated and in which a group of people had come to the same conclusion. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "andy" wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for the reply but I was looking for something that could be repeated and in which a group of people had come to the same conclusion. When mixing in one location for a period of time, I often take my own monitors and power amp with me. The system consists of a Radford STA100 (UK built late 1960's) and a pair of Tannoy Lancaster loudspeakers. Many studio systems can offer a lot more power, but I have yet to hear one offering such detail. I put my system up for audition by the client or artists with whom I am working, and they usually agree that this is the combination on which they wish to monitor the project as it evolves. It's quite fun to see a valve power amp in the control room of an otherwise all digital studio:-) SS Studio power amps are rarely below 0.5 kW, and have distortion figs with a number of zeros to the right of the decimal point. One would expect them to sound better. Be aware though that valve amps have a much lower levels of NFB, and thus a lower damping factor (15 is typical) So some modern and a few not-so-modern loudspeakers represent a difficult load for a valve power amplifier. However, the impedance of any good speaker should conform to IEC/EN/BS EN 60268-5 which means that fore a speaker of nominal 8 ohm, the impedance may drop to 80% of the rated value, i.e. 6.4 Ohms. So, as far as a valve amp is concerned, you should chose the amplifier speaker combination with care. Cordially, Iain |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 22 Apr 2005 03:10:00 -0700, "andy" wrote:
For there to be *any* difference, one of the amps must be audibly distorting. Most SS amps don't do this, A reasonable design, operating within the linear region and driving a benign load perhaps. Do all transistor amplifers sound the same driving 1 ohm loudspeakers? No, they don't, but those that are *specified* to drive 1 ohm speakers do (e.g. all non-AV Krells). Can *any* valve amp *drive* 1 ohm speakers to a reasonable level? OTOH, most SS amps do indeed sound the same into real-world 4-8 ohm speakers. so the odds are that you'll be hearing valve amp artifacts if there is an audible difference. These are typically euphonic, i.e. 'nice' even though inaccurate, so there may well be an expressed *preference* for the tube amp. The study of this would be the point of the exercise. But *why*? We already know of this preference for euphonic inaccuracies such as even-order distortion, a high noise floor, and reverberant microphony. However, this has nothing to do with fidelity to the source, where you want *zero* audible differences. Ideally one would want this as an option. Not if you're a fan of valve amps, where the target seems to be to sound *different* from a good SS amp, hence by definition inaccurate. What was the point of your question, and what did you mean by 'in favour of the valve amplifier'? To compare a transistor and valve amplifier where the former is working in as linear a manner as practicable but there is a strong preference for the sound of the latter. Common enough with the SET gang, but so what? We already know that nonlinear valve amps produce euphonic artifacts, so what are you trying to learn here? BTW, just ignore Turner's spiteful whining from the sidelimnes, he's a bitter old Aussie who's woman quite rightly dumped him, and he has nothing new to say. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stewart, one often overlooked item is that transistors are by their
nature non-linear, so surrounding them with oggles of negative feedback, is responsible for their low THD scores on a meter. But maybe doesn't really reduce their inherent distortion - those distortions of a non-harmonic nature... time related distortions and other types. So who is really so sure that tube amps are inherently more distorted ? Of course, those few tube amps which lack an output transformer, do seem to be more transistor like sounding in some ways, but are too few and far in between to make up another category. Perhaps we need to have output transformered transistor amps for making a rightious comparison ? Interesting that among vintage amps, those amps known for unusually good sound often had an "interstage" transformer, both expensive tube ones like the $100K. lunatic fringe stuff and the transistor ones (like the old gold faced AR Integrated Amp) which probably sounded better than its ancient 2N3054 Drivers and 2N3055 output transistors would otherwise have allowed, simply because it had a huge interstage tranny in there. So really maybe my speaker also has some of that euphoric even harmonics stuff too, but really I don't rely on a meter to tell me what sounds more like music and what sounds like SH^T. I've done the tube amp / transistor amp comparison here and had others doing the listening. They all think bottles and silicon sound different, and in general, the non-linearities of the transistor stuff is quite audibly apparent. Also, similar transistor amps sound different too - worse as the level of complexity goes up. Adding a single differential input stage might make the THD meter go down to .005% from .05% for a single-ended input stage, but the amp with the differential input stage, being several transistors more complicated, sounds decidedly WORSE on real world speakers. Truth be told, all amps are "audibly distorting" just maybe in ways your ear knows, but which would elude a THD Meter, that is why there are half a dozen types of distortion, not "just" THD. Stewart, why is it that the tube amp sounds more like "music" ? Could it be that the artifacts of the transistor amp are the result of the feedback, which are subtractive to the music ? If the nonlinearities are in fact removing some harmonics that SHOULD be in there, the resulting transistor amp sounds thin, unlike real music ? So maybe tube amps DON'T produce Euphoric or Euphonic Effects, transistor amps just LOSE the existing harmonics that should be in there, and that shows up as low THD results, but the ear knows which sounds like music. So who is to say which amp is more distorted, a THD Meter, or your ears Stewart ??? -Steven L. Bender |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Stewart, one often overlooked item is that transistors are by their nature non-linear, so surrounding them with oggles of negative feedback, is responsible for their low THD scores on a meter. But maybe doesn't really reduce their inherent distortion - those distortions of a non-harmonic nature... time related distortions and other types. So who is really so sure that tube amps are inherently more distorted ? Of course, those few tube amps which lack an output transformer, do seem to be more transistor like sounding in some ways, but are too few and far in between to make up another category. Perhaps we need to have output transformered transistor amps for making a rightious comparison ? Interesting that among vintage amps, those amps known for unusually good sound often had an "interstage" transformer, both expensive tube ones like the $100K. lunatic fringe stuff and the transistor ones (like the old gold faced AR Integrated Amp) which probably sounded better than its ancient 2N3054 Drivers and 2N3055 output transistors would otherwise have allowed, simply because it had a huge interstage tranny in there. So really maybe my speaker also has some of that euphoric even harmonics stuff too, but really I don't rely on a meter to tell me what sounds more like music and what sounds like SH^T. I've done the tube amp / transistor amp comparison here and had others doing the listening. They all think bottles and silicon sound different, and in general, the non-linearities of the transistor stuff is quite audibly apparent. Also, similar transistor amps sound different too - worse as the level of complexity goes up. Adding a single differential input stage might make the THD meter go down to .005% from .05% for a single-ended input stage, but the amp with the differential input stage, being several transistors more complicated, sounds decidedly WORSE on real world speakers. Truth be told, all amps are "audibly distorting" just maybe in ways your ear knows, but which would elude a THD Meter, that is why there are half a dozen types of distortion, not "just" THD. Stewart, why is it that the tube amp sounds more like "music" ? Could it be that the artifacts of the transistor amp are the result of the feedback, which are subtractive to the music ? If the nonlinearities are in fact removing some harmonics that SHOULD be in there, the resulting transistor amp sounds thin, unlike real music ? So maybe tube amps DON'T produce Euphoric or Euphonic Effects, transistor amps just LOSE the existing harmonics that should be in there, and that shows up as low THD results, but the ear knows which sounds like music. So who is to say which amp is more distorted, a THD Meter, or your ears Stewart ??? -Steven L. Bender ** This article effectively and concisely debunks all the above crap - as preached by demented lunatics like Bender. http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/ampin...o/subjectv.htm Note fig 3 - the Baxandall cancellation test. Audiophools shy away from it like Zombies from garlic cloves in old horror movies !!! ............. Phil |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 22 Apr 2005 13:19:25 -0700, "
wrote: Stewart, one often overlooked item is that transistors are by their nature non-linear, so surrounding them with oggles of negative feedback, is responsible for their low THD scores on a meter. But maybe doesn't really reduce their inherent distortion - those distortions of a non-harmonic nature... time related distortions and other types. If you don't know, please don't make up non-existent 'distortions' to justify your preference. There's no magic or arcane science lurking behind the curtain here, it's a simple black box job. Take a device with an input and an output, and you can easily characterise *all* the distortions without having to know anything about what's in the box, be it transistors, tubes or electric fairies. So who is really so sure that tube amps are inherently more distorted ? Depends on the amps in question, but 99% of the time it's true. Of course, those few tube amps which lack an output transformer, do seem to be more transistor like sounding in some ways, but are too few and far in between to make up another category. OTOH, they are also very bad at driving low speaker loads, which is not at all 'transistor-like'. Perhaps we need to have output transformered transistor amps for making a rightious comparison ? I believe McIntosh made quite a few of those, if you really must destroy the linearity of a transistor amp by including an inherently non-linear device like an output tranny. Interesting that among vintage amps, those amps known for unusually good sound often had an "interstage" transformer, both expensive tube ones like the $100K. lunatic fringe stuff and the transistor ones (like the old gold faced AR Integrated Amp) which probably sounded better than its ancient 2N3054 Drivers and 2N3055 output transistors would otherwise have allowed, simply because it had a huge interstage tranny in there. That was only there because you couldn't get decent complementary pairs in the early days. As soon as good complementary pairs arrived, interstage trannies disappeared. We call it 'progress'. So really maybe my speaker also has some of that euphoric even harmonics stuff too, but really I don't rely on a meter to tell me what sounds more like music and what sounds like SH^T. Neither do I, I rely on level-matched blind listening tests. I've done the tube amp / transistor amp comparison here and had others doing the listening. They all think bottles and silicon sound different, and in general, the non-linearities of the transistor stuff is quite audibly apparent. Utter bull**** - good modern SS amps have no audible distortion whatever. Bottles certainly can sound different, but they are *adding* artifacts to the signal. It's well-known that these artifacts are typically euphonic, so it's common enough to find a *preference* for that rose-tinted sound - but it ain't hi-fi! Also, similar transistor amps sound different too - worse as the level of complexity goes up. Adding a single differential input stage might make the THD meter go down to .005% from .05% for a single-ended input stage, but the amp with the differential input stage, being several transistors more complicated, sounds decidedly WORSE on real world speakers. Again, utter bull****, as I'll be happy to demonstrate in a *blind* test. Truth be told, all amps are "audibly distorting" just maybe in ways your ear knows, but which would elude a THD Meter, No, they aren't. This is easily proven by bypass testing, where you can compare the output of an amp directly with its source signal. that is why there are half a dozen types of distortion, not "just" THD. Certainly there are - and they're all easily measurable. Stewart, why is it that the tube amp sounds more like "music" ? I already explained that - they don't, it's just that they often *add* euphonic artifacts. Could it be that the artifacts of the transistor amp are the result of the feedback, which are subtractive to the music ? There are *no* audible artifacts in any decent SS amp. Stop making things up to suit *your* prejuduces. If the nonlinearities are in fact removing some harmonics that SHOULD be in there, the resulting transistor amp sounds thin, unlike real music ? That's just outrageously stupid. So maybe tube amps DON'T produce Euphoric or Euphonic Effects, Yes, they do. transistor amps just LOSE the existing harmonics that should be in there, and that shows up as low THD results, but the ear knows which sounds like music. Utter rubbish, a typical tubie fairy tale for which you can present *zero* evidence. With *any* good amp, what goes in, comes out. Nothing mysteriously 'lost' in the process. Works just as well for the few really good tube amps such as the C-J Premier Eight and ARC VT 150, as it does for the huge raft of competent SS amps. As you'd expect, these excellent tube amps sound just like a good SS amp in a level-matched blind test, where of course you *have* to trust your ears as you don't *know* what's playing. So who is to say which amp is more distorted, a THD Meter, or your ears Stewart ??? My ears, which can tell the difference between any good amp (tube or SS) and a *bad* amp, which is typified by the SET. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Phil Allison" wrote in
: Stewart, one often overlooked item is that transistors are by their nature non-linear, so surrounding them with oggles of negative feedback, is responsible for their low THD scores on a meter. But maybe doesn't really reduce their inherent distortion - those distortions of a non-harmonic nature... time related distortions and other types. So who is really so sure that tube amps are inherently more distorted ? Of course, those few tube amps which lack an output transformer, do seem to be more transistor like sounding in some ways, but are too few and far in between to make up another category. Perhaps we need to have output transformered transistor amps for making a rightious comparison ? Interesting that among vintage amps, those amps known for unusually good sound often had an "interstage" transformer, both expensive tube ones like the $100K. lunatic fringe stuff and the transistor ones (like the old gold faced AR Integrated Amp) which probably sounded better than its ancient 2N3054 Drivers and 2N3055 output transistors would otherwise have allowed, simply because it had a huge interstage tranny in there. So really maybe my speaker also has some of that euphoric even harmonics stuff too, but really I don't rely on a meter to tell me what sounds more like music and what sounds like SH^T. I've done the tube amp / transistor amp comparison here and had others doing the listening. They all think bottles and silicon sound different, and in general, the non-linearities of the transistor stuff is quite audibly apparent. Also, similar transistor amps sound different too - worse as the level of complexity goes up. Adding a single differential input stage might make the THD meter go down to .005% from .05% for a single-ended input stage, but the amp with the differential input stage, being several transistors more complicated, sounds decidedly WORSE on real world speakers. Truth be told, all amps are "audibly distorting" just maybe in ways your ear knows, but which would elude a THD Meter, that is why there are half a dozen types of distortion, not "just" THD. Stewart, why is it that the tube amp sounds more like "music" ? Could it be that the artifacts of the transistor amp are the result of the feedback, which are subtractive to the music ? If the nonlinearities are in fact removing some harmonics that SHOULD be in there, the resulting transistor amp sounds thin, unlike real music ? So maybe tube amps DON'T produce Euphoric or Euphonic Effects, transistor amps just LOSE the existing harmonics that should be in there, and that shows up as low THD results, but the ear knows which sounds like music. So who is to say which amp is more distorted, a THD Meter, or your ears Stewart ??? -Steven L. Bender ** This article effectively and concisely debunks all the above crap - as preached by demented lunatics like Bender. http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/ampin...o/subjectv.htm Note fig 3 - the Baxandall cancellation test. Audiophools shy away from it like Zombies from garlic cloves in old horror movies !!! ............ Phil A well put article. I like it. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Recent Stock Stereo Comparison? | Car Audio | |||
Update: Comparison of Hi-Res Portable Audio Recorders (PDAudio,PMD670,FR-2,R-1) | Tech | |||
Updated: Comparison of PDAudio, FR-2, PMD670, R-1 | Pro Audio | |||
Incredible Mic Comparison | Pro Audio | |||
here are some preamp comparison results | Pro Audio |