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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Andre Jute
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...

No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?
Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design. The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic. Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output. From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB. Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)

3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure, with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears. Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

And they still use Negative Feedback? Are they stupid?
No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output. The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically. The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS; if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1. Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB. Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier. But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects. In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already. All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear. This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!
That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'. This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time. NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels. We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

*******
More Zero Negative Feedback amplifiers at Jute on Amps
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/JUTE%20ON%20AMPS.htm
The KISS Amp project, which explains much more, is here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm
and its schematics and transfer curves are here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/KISS%20190.htm

********
THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.
GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP

All text and illustration is Copyright © Andre Jute 2001, 2004, 2006
and may not be reproduced except in the thread KISS xxx on
rec.audio.tubes

  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Trevor Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB. Every single one. Some do it vai the use of
local feedback loops (like in emitter/cathode degeneration). Some use
internal NFB (such as what occurs within a triode). Some use so-called
'nested feedback' loops, whilst others (the vast majority) use Global
feedback systems. Your KISS 300B uses NFB. Lots of it. Perhaps not as much
as a typical SS amp, but it still uses NFB for linearisation. Without it,
the sound would suck. Big time.


Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...


**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every single one. Not one
amplifier, anywhere, uses Zero NFB. None, nada, zip, zero. So, if you want
to re-state your comment, please do so, but do so ACCURATELY. Define what
types of NFB you are speaking of.


No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

**A gross oversimplification. And you know it. There are many methods of
applying NFB. Some methods have minimal side effects.


'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

**Er, there is another possibility: NFB allows those amplifiers to provide
clean, undistorted sound. Lack (or more correctly: INSUFFICIENT) NFB merely
alloows an amplifier to possess a distrotion characteristic which is enjoyed
by many listeners.

ANECDOTE
Many years ago, I service musical instrument amplifiers (almost always tube
types) on a regular basis. One lead guitarist client was very particular
about his favourite amplifier. It had to produce just the right amount of
distortion. It was an ancient 20 Watt amp, with an inbuilt speaker. The amp
was miked to a large (soild state) PA system. He chose the SS PA system
because it did not distort the sound of his little 20 Watt amp.

/ANECDOTE


Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?

**Er, because it works. Your KISS 300B amp uses NFB. YOU know that NFB
works.


Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design.

**And, guess what? All modern automobiles use NFB systems of some complexity
in their fuel injection systems. Same deal with military control systems.
Like it or not, NFB is pretty much essential to the operation of all
electronic systems. Including your KISS 300B amplifier.

The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

**They lie. ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every single one.
Including your KISS 300B amp.


The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic.

**No distortion is harmless. 2nd harmonic *may* be less objectionable to
SOME listeners. It is not harmless. Moreover, NFB reduces odd order
distortion. And even order distortion.

Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output.

**That would depend on the size of the loop. The NFB loop contained with a
triode is small. As is the loop contained with an emitter degeneration
system. As a consequence, the problems tend to be reduced.

From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd.

**Perhaps. What if these artefacts are above (say) 30kHz and below (say)
0.01% of the total? Are they audible? Can you hear less than 0.01% THD,
regardless of the harmonic structure?

Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB.

**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB. Every single one. Therre is no such thing as
an amplifier which has no NFB.

Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)


**You're making a whole bunch of bad assumptions. Starting with your most
basic, incorrect assumption: That an amplifier exists which does not use
NFB. It ain't so. ALL amplifiers use NFB. It is tthe TYPE and amount of NFB
which varies between amplifiers.


3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure,

**What if those artefacts are below (say) 0.01%?

with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

**What if those artefacts are below (say) 0.01%?


4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears.

**Cite you evidence to prove this. Additionally, cite the levels that you
are referring to. Is a "low volume level" equivalent to 0.1 Watt, 1 Watt, 10
Watts, or 100 Watts? Please be specific. What is the room size? Speaker
efficiency? The dynamic range of the recordings used?

Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

**How much odd harmonic distortion? 0.01%? More? Less?


And they still use Negative Feedback?

**All amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.

Are they stupid?

**Your own KISS 300B amplifier uses NFB. Does that make you stupid?

No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one. If you imagine that one exists
which does not use NFB, then present your evidence.


But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.

**No such device, nor system exists.

The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically.

**Incorrect. On several counts. Triodes utilise an internal NFB system to
linearise their operation. Modern BJTs are more linear than triodes. Yes,
MORE linear. Even quite high power BJTs are very, very linear indeed. More
linear than triodes and MUCH more linear than the accused Pentodes. Get with
the programme and look at the spec sheets (run the curves yourself, if you
wish) of (say) the Toshiba 2SC5200. From less than 0.01A all the way past 3
Amps, it demonstates bugger all variation in gain. Let's see a triode (any
triode) come close to that feat. Modern BJTs are phenomenally linear.
Something which most tube nuts seem blissfully unaware of of, since they
lost interestin transistors back in 1970, when single diffused, low
frequency and highly non-linear devices were the only things available. Move
into the 21st Century and you will se a whole new world of very impressive
devices available to the designer.

The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS;

**Of course. Some listeners enjoy distortion. PP reduces distortion. No
downsides. Just less distortion.

if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1.

**Why? With suitably matched devices (impossible with tubes, I admit), one
need only organise enough bias current to keep operation in the linear part
of the amplification curve. Any more is wasteful.

Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.

Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier.

**There is nothing that a SE design can do that a PP design cannot do
cheaper, better and more efficiently.

But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects.

**All amplifier use NFB. Every single one.

In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

**You can't "get rid" of NFB. Particularly in triode amplifiers. It is built
right into the triode. If you "get rid" of the feedback in a triode, you end
up with a pentode. I prefer to call that an abomination.


Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already.

**You first need to prove that an amplifier eixists which can operate
without NFB.

All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

**Cite please. Cite SPECIFIC amplifiers used. Cite operating conditions.


Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear.

**Duh. It is reasonable assumed by most that levels of THD below (say) 0.1%
are pretty much inaudible. Reductions below this level are pretty much
inconsequential. Conversely, levels ABOVE (say) 0.5% are not
inconsequential. They are audible to many listeners.

This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

**Nope. Your train of logic is utterly and completely flawed. In several
ways:

* ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.
* Amplifiers of different types, can use widely different types of NFB
application. You have been spectacularly vague about the different types of
NFB available to designers.
* Modern transistors (specifically output transistors) are MUCH more linear
than any tube. Including triodes.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!

**NO AMPLIFIER WORKS WITHOUT NFB. Not one.


That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

**It is extremely costly and difficult to build high efficiency speakers,
which also possess a wide bandwidth and good dispersion characteristics. If
you know of any, then cite them.


Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'.

**I know of no listeners who are "forced" to do anything.

This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time.

**Prove it.


NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels.

**Even your own KISS 300B amp, which uses NFB? How curious.

We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB for linearisation. Every single one.



--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au


  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
:
: "Andre Jute" wrote in message
: ups.com...
: Some meterhead clown demands to know:
: What's wrong with feedback?
: and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
: an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback
: demands to know:
: So what?

snipped lotsastuff youcanreadupwardsinthethread
: --
: Trevor Wilson
: www.rageaudio.com.au

we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
doesn't seem unreasonable...

excusez for not having included you on the ss
shortlist.
so, why not build flipper's frontend , completed with that
Toshiba 2SC5200 for power
& report back ?

Rudy


  #4   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Andre Jute
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

Trevor Wilson wrote:
(a long commentary on my original post, all of it reproduced in full
below)

I never said an amp can work without NFB; that's your desperate spin on
the matter. In fact, I took part in a long thread which determined that
a 300B has about 12-14dB of internal or natural NFB. You, Trevor
Wilson, know that what I actually believe is that most amps work better
without *added* negative feedback. And I told you so again:

It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.


See the "added"? It makes clear to even the rawest newbie what I
intend. No one who has been in high level tube amps for more than a
semester needs it spelled out. Everyone knows the convention is that an
amp without added NFB is described as having Zero Negative Feedback.
You, Trevor Wilson, cannot fail to know it, therefore you are picking
desperate nits -- and giving away your desperation by hysterically
screeching your misleading lie "no such thing as a ZNFB amp" over and
over again, probably more than twenty times (those who care can count
below).

Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.

Andre Jute

Here is Trevor Wilson's full commentary:

"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB. Every single one. Some do it vai the use of
local feedback loops (like in emitter/cathode degeneration). Some use
internal NFB (such as what occurs within a triode). Some use so-called
'nested feedback' loops, whilst others (the vast majority) use Global
feedback systems. Your KISS 300B uses NFB. Lots of it. Perhaps not as much
as a typical SS amp, but it still uses NFB for linearisation. Without it,
the sound would suck. Big time.


Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...


**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every single one. Not one
amplifier, anywhere, uses Zero NFB. None, nada, zip, zero. So, if you want
to re-state your comment, please do so, but do so ACCURATELY. Define what
types of NFB you are speaking of.


No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

**A gross oversimplification. And you know it. There are many methods of
applying NFB. Some methods have minimal side effects.


'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

**Er, there is another possibility: NFB allows those amplifiers to provide
clean, undistorted sound. Lack (or more correctly: INSUFFICIENT) NFB merely
alloows an amplifier to possess a distrotion characteristic which is enjoyed
by many listeners.

ANECDOTE
Many years ago, I service musical instrument amplifiers (almost always tube
types) on a regular basis. One lead guitarist client was very particular
about his favourite amplifier. It had to produce just the right amount of
distortion. It was an ancient 20 Watt amp, with an inbuilt speaker. The amp
was miked to a large (soild state) PA system. He chose the SS PA system
because it did not distort the sound of his little 20 Watt amp.

/ANECDOTE


Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?

**Er, because it works. Your KISS 300B amp uses NFB. YOU know that NFB
works.


Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design.

**And, guess what? All modern automobiles use NFB systems of some complexity
in their fuel injection systems. Same deal with military control systems.
Like it or not, NFB is pretty much essential to the operation of all
electronic systems. Including your KISS 300B amplifier.

The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

**They lie. ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every single one.
Including your KISS 300B amp.


The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic.

**No distortion is harmless. 2nd harmonic *may* be less objectionable to
SOME listeners. It is not harmless. Moreover, NFB reduces odd order
distortion. And even order distortion.

Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output.

**That would depend on the size of the loop. The NFB loop contained with a
triode is small. As is the loop contained with an emitter degeneration
system. As a consequence, the problems tend to be reduced.

From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd.

**Perhaps. What if these artefacts are above (say) 30kHz and below (say)
0.01% of the total? Are they audible? Can you hear less than 0.01% THD,
regardless of the harmonic structure?

Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB.

**ALL amplifiers utilise NFB. Every single one. Therre is no such thing as
an amplifier which has no NFB.

Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)


**You're making a whole bunch of bad assumptions. Starting with your most
basic, incorrect assumption: That an amplifier exists which does not use
NFB. It ain't so. ALL amplifiers use NFB. It is tthe TYPE and amount of NFB
which varies between amplifiers.


3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure,

**What if those artefacts are below (say) 0.01%?

with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

**What if those artefacts are below (say) 0.01%?


4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears.

**Cite you evidence to prove this. Additionally, cite the levels that you
are referring to. Is a "low volume level" equivalent to 0.1 Watt, 1 Watt, 10
Watts, or 100 Watts? Please be specific. What is the room size? Speaker
efficiency? The dynamic range of the recordings used?

Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

**How much odd harmonic distortion? 0.01%? More? Less?


And they still use Negative Feedback?

**All amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.

Are they stupid?

**Your own KISS 300B amplifier uses NFB. Does that make you stupid?

No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one. If you imagine that one exists
which does not use NFB, then present your evidence.


But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.

**No such device, nor system exists.

The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically.

**Incorrect. On several counts. Triodes utilise an internal NFB system to
linearise their operation. Modern BJTs are more linear than triodes. Yes,
MORE linear. Even quite high power BJTs are very, very linear indeed. More
linear than triodes and MUCH more linear than the accused Pentodes. Get with
the programme and look at the spec sheets (run the curves yourself, if you
wish) of (say) the Toshiba 2SC5200. From less than 0.01A all the way past 3
Amps, it demonstates bugger all variation in gain. Let's see a triode (any
triode) come close to that feat. Modern BJTs are phenomenally linear.
Something which most tube nuts seem blissfully unaware of of, since they
lost interestin transistors back in 1970, when single diffused, low
frequency and highly non-linear devices were the only things available. Move
into the 21st Century and you will se a whole new world of very impressive
devices available to the designer.

The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS;

**Of course. Some listeners enjoy distortion. PP reduces distortion. No
downsides. Just less distortion.

if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1.

**Why? With suitably matched devices (impossible with tubes, I admit), one
need only organise enough bias current to keep operation in the linear part
of the amplification curve. Any more is wasteful.

Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.

Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier.

**There is nothing that a SE design can do that a PP design cannot do
cheaper, better and more efficiently.

But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects.

**All amplifier use NFB. Every single one.

In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

**You can't "get rid" of NFB. Particularly in triode amplifiers. It is built
right into the triode. If you "get rid" of the feedback in a triode, you end
up with a pentode. I prefer to call that an abomination.


Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already.

**You first need to prove that an amplifier eixists which can operate
without NFB.

All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

**Cite please. Cite SPECIFIC amplifiers used. Cite operating conditions.


Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear.

**Duh. It is reasonable assumed by most that levels of THD below (say) 0.1%
are pretty much inaudible. Reductions below this level are pretty much
inconsequential. Conversely, levels ABOVE (say) 0.5% are not
inconsequential. They are audible to many listeners.

This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

**Nope. Your train of logic is utterly and completely flawed. In several
ways:

* ALL amplifiers use NFB. Every single one.
* Amplifiers of different types, can use widely different types of NFB
application. You have been spectacularly vague about the different types of
NFB available to designers.
* Modern transistors (specifically output transistors) are MUCH more linear
than any tube. Including triodes.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!

**NO AMPLIFIER WORKS WITHOUT NFB. Not one.


That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

**It is extremely costly and difficult to build high efficiency speakers,
which also possess a wide bandwidth and good dispersion characteristics. If
you know of any, then cite them.


Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'.

**I know of no listeners who are "forced" to do anything.

This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time.

**Prove it.


NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels.

**Even your own KISS 300B amp, which uses NFB? How curious.

We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

**ALL amplifiers use NFB for linearisation. Every single one.


  #5   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
:
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: ...
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
:
: **In practice, there is no difference. A curent flowing through a resistance
: allows a Voltage to be developed = Voltage gain.
:
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
: **The difference is academic.
:
:
: excusez for not having included you on the ss
: shortlist.
: so, why not build flipper's frontend , completed with that
: Toshiba 2SC5200 for power
: & report back ?
:
: **Who's "flipper"?
:

he, are you playing inspector ClueSo?
or something ?
get a google clue
:-)
on rat
R.
: --
: Trevor Wilson
: www.rageaudio.com.au
:
:




  #6   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Trevor Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Trevor Wilson wrote:
(a long commentary on my original post, all of it reproduced in full
below)

I never said an amp can work without NFB;


**Yes, you did. Several times, in fact.

that's your desperate spin on
the matter. In fact, I took part in a long thread which determined that
a 300B has about 12-14dB of internal or natural NFB.


**Then why do you persist in claiming that such an amp can exist with no
NFB?

You, Trevor
Wilson, know that what I actually believe is that most amps work better
without *added* negative feedback.


**I KNOW that you just published a bunch of lies and half truths. THAT is
what I DO know. If you want to publish a correction (which includes the
superior linearity of modern BJTs over triodes) then I will support you in
that endeavour.

And I told you so again:

It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.


See the "added"? It makes clear to even the rawest newbie what I
intend.


**No, it does not. I deal daily with newbies (and a goodly number of those
who aren't newbies) about the issues surrounding NFB. Most have no idea that
ALL amplifiers use NFB of some type for linearisation. Many more have no
idea that a triode utilises and internal NFB system. You have merely
perpetuated these myths. If you want to explain stuff, then be precise. If
you mean local NFB, say so. If you mean Global NFB, say so. If you mean
nested NFB, say so. Each feedback system will affect any given amplifier in
different ways. As you well (or bloody well should) know.

No one who has been in high level tube amps for more than a
semester needs it spelled out.


**Bull****! I see it every day.

Everyone knows the convention is that an
amp without added NFB is described as having Zero Negative Feedback.


**Piling more bull**** on top, does not make it so. Spell out EXACTLY what
you mean when you speak of feedback and there'll be fewer problems. If you
mean Zero GLOBAL NFB, then say so. As you well know, not all SS amps utilise
Global NFB for linearisation. In fact, they use similar feedback methods to
your triode amps. And, surprise surprise, they often provide many of the
benefits often ascribed to triode amps, without the obvious shortcomings.
But you would not want to actually educate people, would you?

You, Trevor Wilson, cannot fail to know it, therefore you are picking
desperate nits


**Nope. I just get tired of people like you perpetuating lies and half
truths.

-- and giving away your desperation by hysterically
screeching your misleading lie "no such thing as a ZNFB amp" over and
over again, probably more than twenty times (those who care can count
below).


**If you can manage some honesty and accuracy, then I would not nbeed to
correct your mistakes (lies?).


Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


**You have no idea.


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au


  #7   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...

"Ruud Broens" wrote in message
...

"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
:
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: ...
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
:
: **In practice, there is no difference. A curent flowing through a
resistance
: allows a Voltage to be developed = Voltage gain.
:
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
: **The difference is academic.
:
:
: excusez for not having included you on the ss
: shortlist.
: so, why not build flipper's frontend , completed with that
: Toshiba 2SC5200 for power
: & report back ?
:
: **Who's "flipper"?
:

he, are you playing inspector ClueSo?
or something ?
get a google clue
:-)
on rat


**I'll ask again: Who's "flipper"?


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au

One of the regular posters on RAT.


  #8   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

On 23 Mar 2006 17:37:10 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:

Trevor Wilson wrote:
(a long commentary on my original post, all of it reproduced in full
below)

I never said an amp can work without NFB; that's your desperate spin on
the matter. In fact, I took part in a long thread which determined that
a 300B has about 12-14dB of internal or natural NFB.


'Natural' NFB? You truly are a prize specimen, Jute, you'll tell any
lie and make up any fairy tale to support your utterly farcical
'ultrafidelista' mythology.

You, Trevor
Wilson, know that what I actually believe is that most amps work better
without *added* negative feedback.


If you believe that, then you're wrong.

And I told you so again:

It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.


See the "added"? It makes clear to even the rawest newbie what I
intend. No one who has been in high level tube amps for more than a
semester needs it spelled out. Everyone knows the convention is that an
amp without added NFB is described as having Zero Negative Feedback.


The convention is wrong, this is simply mythology put about by those
who are stuck with devices which *cannot* use large amounts of
linearising feedback.

The bottom line is in the output signal, and the output of a good
modern SS amp has *vastly* lower distortion than that of any SET amp.

You, Trevor Wilson, cannot fail to know it, therefore you are picking
desperate nits -- and giving away your desperation by hysterically
screeching your misleading lie "no such thing as a ZNFB amp" over and
over again, probably more than twenty times (those who care can count
below).

Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


Jute, you know very little about amplifiers, and you are certainly not
right about this. Tubes have been obsolete for the best part of fifty
years, except for fashion victims who like big shiny toys that glow in
the dark.

Andre Jute


snip reams of Jute's garbage which he pasted from his hilarious
website


--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
----------------------------------------------------------
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----------------------------------------------------------
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  #9   Report Post  
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Bret Ludwig
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


Stewart Pinkerton wrote:.
snip

Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


Jute, you know very little about amplifiers, and you are certainly not
right about this. Tubes have been obsolete for the best part of fifty
years, except for fashion victims who like big shiny toys that glow in
the dark.

Andre Jute




Jute's a ****penis, but the fact is people buy audio equipment like
women buy designer dresses and that isn't going to change. If you want
some booty you let her spend her money the way she wants and don't
balk.

Tubes were the most reliable and best sounding way to build an audio
amplifier up until relatively recent times and they still work very
well when correctly designed. Solid state amplifiers that are truly
well built are not much cheaper than tube ones, and if they made more
tube ones the price would come down and quality go up.

  #10   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Andre Jute
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

I must say, Wilson, I don't understand why you're getting your knickers
in a knot. You're like those bolshies I used to know who claimed that
anyone who wasn't willing to kill for "socialism" was only play-acting.
Are you really claiming that someone who merely uses the NFB he finds
lurking in DHTs can't belong to the club until he repents and uses
excessive amounts of loop NFB? Are you really claiming that the use of
lots and lots of NFB is a prerequisite for good audio design? Are you
really claiming that because a little NFB is a good thing, an unlimited
amount must therefore be better, and an infinite amount best of all?
Seems a bit immoderate to me, old chap.

Your hysterical belief that I am "against" NFB is the product of your
unsophisticated literal-mindedness. There is no reason for NFB to be an
act of faith, like an on-off switch. For the record, quite contrary to
your silly claims about what I said, I believe the little NFB that
occurs naturally in triodes and in certain conservatively sanctioned
traditional topologies are A Good Thing. To avoid giving you another
apoplectic fit, I shan't repeat what I think of the excessive amounts
of NFB required to make transistors work at all.

If you think you can write a more compelling argument than I can about
the evils of excessive NFB, have at it. But every time I see you, like
the other techies you merely kibbitz what better men have written.

Andre Jute


Trevor Wilson wrote:
"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Trevor Wilson wrote:
(a long commentary on my original post, all of it reproduced in full
below)

I never said an amp can work without NFB;


**Yes, you did. Several times, in fact.

that's your desperate spin on
the matter. In fact, I took part in a long thread which determined that
a 300B has about 12-14dB of internal or natural NFB.


**Then why do you persist in claiming that such an amp can exist with no
NFB?

You, Trevor
Wilson, know that what I actually believe is that most amps work better
without *added* negative feedback.


**I KNOW that you just published a bunch of lies and half truths. THAT is
what I DO know. If you want to publish a correction (which includes the
superior linearity of modern BJTs over triodes) then I will support you in
that endeavour.

And I told you so again:

It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.


See the "added"? It makes clear to even the rawest newbie what I
intend.


**No, it does not. I deal daily with newbies (and a goodly number of those
who aren't newbies) about the issues surrounding NFB. Most have no idea that
ALL amplifiers use NFB of some type for linearisation. Many more have no
idea that a triode utilises and internal NFB system. You have merely
perpetuated these myths. If you want to explain stuff, then be precise. If
you mean local NFB, say so. If you mean Global NFB, say so. If you mean
nested NFB, say so. Each feedback system will affect any given amplifier in
different ways. As you well (or bloody well should) know.

No one who has been in high level tube amps for more than a
semester needs it spelled out.


**Bull****! I see it every day.

Everyone knows the convention is that an
amp without added NFB is described as having Zero Negative Feedback.


**Piling more bull**** on top, does not make it so. Spell out EXACTLY what
you mean when you speak of feedback and there'll be fewer problems. If you
mean Zero GLOBAL NFB, then say so. As you well know, not all SS amps utilise
Global NFB for linearisation. In fact, they use similar feedback methods to
your triode amps. And, surprise surprise, they often provide many of the
benefits often ascribed to triode amps, without the obvious shortcomings.
But you would not want to actually educate people, would you?

You, Trevor Wilson, cannot fail to know it, therefore you are picking
desperate nits


**Nope. I just get tired of people like you perpetuating lies and half
truths.

-- and giving away your desperation by hysterically
screeching your misleading lie "no such thing as a ZNFB amp" over and
over again, probably more than twenty times (those who care can count
below).


**If you can manage some honesty and accuracy, then I would not nbeed to
correct your mistakes (lies?).


Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


**You have no idea.


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au




  #11   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Trevor Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Bret Ludwig" wrote in message
oups.com...

Stewart Pinkerton wrote:.
snip

Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


Jute, you know very little about amplifiers, and you are certainly not
right about this. Tubes have been obsolete for the best part of fifty
years, except for fashion victims who like big shiny toys that glow in
the dark.

Andre Jute




Jute's a ****penis, but the fact is people buy audio equipment like
women buy designer dresses and that isn't going to change. If you want
some booty you let her spend her money the way she wants and don't
balk.


**Irrelevant. Jute lies to get his point accross. If he told the truth, no
one would care either way. When confronted by his obvious lies, he tells
more lies to disguise the fact.


Tubes were the most reliable and best sounding way to build an audio
amplifier up until relatively recent times


**Up 'till around 1968, that is quite true. It's now almost FOUR DECADES on.
Jute is STILL telling people about transistor amps which have not existed
for several decades.

and they still work very
well when correctly designed. Solid state amplifiers that are truly
well built are not much cheaper than tube ones, and if they made more
tube ones the price would come down and quality go up.


**Utter and complete ********. Due to the presence of the (expensive) output
transformers, alone, tube amps are priced well above an approximately
equivalent SS one.


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au


  #12   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Arny Krueger
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back
from the output to the input amplifying device to offset
part of the harmonic distortion which is present as a
positive voltage.


Wrong. The voltage that is fed back in audio power amps is almost always
positive with respect to the input and output of the piece of equipment.
Therefore it is wrong to call it a negative voltage.

Wrong. The voltage that is fed back in audio power amps is simply a fraction
of the output signal. It is not fed back to offset the distortion, but
rather is fed back to offset the foreward-going signal voltage.

It costs nothing except a loss of gain
and a few side effects such as phase shift and possible
instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against
depending on the level of NFB.


Wrong. Negative feedback always reduces phase shift. If misapplied it can
cause an amplifier to become less stable, but in fact when properly applied,
negative feedback increases stability.

Negative feedback increases stability in the sense that it stabilizes the
amplifiers most important technical parameters. For example consider the
gain of an amplifier. If there is no negative feedback, then the gain of an
amplifier is very much exposed to natural variations in the parameters of
its active devices whether they be tubes or solid state. For example, the
gain of both tubes and transistors can be very sensitive to temperature.
With negative feedback, the important parameters of the amplifier are set
by a pair of resistors, whose properties can be made to be very stable and
independent of temperature.

You should get the idea by wrong - Jute has no clue about what negative
feedback is, how it works, or what its real benefits are.


  #13   Report Post  
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Arny Krueger
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

"Ruud Broens" wrote in message


we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
doesn't seem unreasonable...



Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.

Where's the beef?


  #14   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
...
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
:
: Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
: voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
: partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.
:
: Where's the beef?
:
they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
why keep claiming it is "superior" ?

:-)
Rudy


  #15   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Bret Ludwig
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
:
: Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
: voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
: partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.



Uhhh, power amplifiers work on complex loads in the power domain?



  #16   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 12:59:37 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
wrote:

"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
...
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
:
: Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
: voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
: partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.
:
: Where's the beef?
:
they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
why keep claiming it is "superior" ?


Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
bendy. The opamp is *designed* to use large amounts of linearising
feedback, something that simply isn't an option with the inherently
much lower open-loop gain of tubes.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
----------------------------------------------------------
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  #17   Report Post  
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Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

On 24 Mar 2006 00:46:36 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:

I must say, Wilson, I don't understand why you're getting your knickers
in a knot. You're like those bolshies I used to know who claimed that
anyone who wasn't willing to kill for "socialism" was only play-acting.
Are you really claiming that someone who merely uses the NFB he finds
lurking in DHTs can't belong to the club until he repents and uses
excessive amounts of loop NFB? Are you really claiming that the use of
lots and lots of NFB is a prerequisite for good audio design? Are you
really claiming that because a little NFB is a good thing, an unlimited
amount must therefore be better, and an infinite amount best of all?
Seems a bit immoderate to me, old chap.

Your hysterical belief that I am "against" NFB is the product of your
unsophisticated literal-mindedness. There is no reason for NFB to be an
act of faith, like an on-off switch. For the record, quite contrary to
your silly claims about what I said, I believe the little NFB that
occurs naturally in triodes and in certain conservatively sanctioned
traditional topologies are A Good Thing. To avoid giving you another
apoplectic fit, I shan't repeat what I think of the excessive amounts
of NFB required to make transistors work at all.


As ever, you have no idea what you're talking about. A modern power
transistor such as the 2SC2922 is *more* linear than a 300B, *without*
any feedback. With feedback, due to its gain of 100, it can achieve
linearity far beyond the wildest dreams of the 'ultrafidelista'.

That, of course, is why KISASS will kick the ass of KISS any day of
the week.

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
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  #18   Report Post  
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Ruud Broens
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
...
: On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 12:59:37 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: wrote:
:
: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message
: ...
: : "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: :
: :
: : we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: : whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: : i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
: : as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: : doesn't seem unreasonable...
: :
: :
: : Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
: : voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
: : partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.
: :
: : Where's the beef?
: :
: they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
: why keep claiming it is "superior" ?
:
: Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
: is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
: bendy.

yeah, right, as in 0.007 % distortion kinda bendy.
must be what they call 'the scottish bend',
then
R.

The opamp is *designed* to use large amounts of linearising
: feedback, something that simply isn't an option with the inherently
: much lower open-loop gain of tubes.
: --
:
: Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
:
: Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
: ----------------------------------------------------------
: ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY **
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Bret Ludwig
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

The details of transistor amplifiers have changed immensely and the
devices have improved, but the physics are still the same as when John
F. Kennedy was holding up operations at Idlewild while pounding on the
Monroe Doctrine in SAM 26000. Bipolar transistors are still low
impedance, current controlled, current controlling devices.

  #20   Report Post  
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Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
...
: On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 17:57:12 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: wrote:
:
: : : Where's the beef?
: : :
: : they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
: : why keep claiming it is "superior" ?
: :
: : Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
: : is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
: : bendy.
:
: yeah, right, as in 0.007 % distortion kinda bendy.
: must be what they call 'the scottish bend',
: then
:
: Be more specific about the tubed circuit you claim has this level of
: distortion.
:

eehhrrmm,
don't think that earlier suggestion of a scottish detective will
work out,
after all,

thanks for detecting,
not even well above noise level,
lot'sZZ

:-)
Rudy




  #21   Report Post  
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Andre Jute
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

Trevor Wilson wrote:
Incorrect and innappropriate application
of NFB can damage an amplifier's performance.


Now you're getting it, sonny. Next, try not to describe as a liar
anyone who doesn't instantly subscribe to your fanatical faith in Blow
Jobs from Transvestites (BJTs) and soon the rest of us might take you
seriously.

Andre Jute
Visit Jute on Amps at http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/
"wonderfully well written and reasoned information
for the tube audio constructor"
John Broskie TubeCAD & GlassWare
"an unbelievably comprehensive web site
containing vital gems of wisdom"
Stuart Perry Hi-Fi News & Record Review


Trevor Wilson wrote:
"Andre Jute" wrote in message
oups.com...
I must say, Wilson, I don't understand why you're getting your knickers
in a knot.


**They're not and I'm not. I am, however, merely pointing out your more
obvious lies.

You're like those bolshies I used to know who claimed that
anyone who wasn't willing to kill for "socialism" was only play-acting.
Are you really claiming that someone who merely uses the NFB he finds
lurking in DHTs can't belong to the club until he repents and uses
excessive amounts of loop NFB?


**Nope. I merely stated that ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation.
You, however, claimed that your amplifiers do not.

Are you really claiming that the use of
lots and lots of NFB is a prerequisite for good audio design?


**Nope. I merely stated that ALL amplifiers utilise lots and lots of NFB for
linearisation. Every single one of them. What differs is HOW that NFB is
applied (and, of course, how much). Of course, you would not want to
actually educate your readers, would you? You would prefer to keep them
confused by your more obvious lies.

Are you
really claiming that because a little NFB is a good thing, an unlimited
amount must therefore be better, and an infinite amount best of all?


**Where did I claim anything of the sort? Be precise in your cite. What I
have stated many times, is that CORRECT and APPROPRIATE application of NFB
will make an amplifier a good one. Incorrect and innappropriate application
of NFB can damage an amplifier's performance.

Seems a bit immoderate to me, old chap.


**Wait for the answer, dickhead.


Your hysterical belief that I am "against" NFB is the product of your
unsophisticated literal-mindedness.


**YOU stated it, not me. YOU claimed that certain amplifiers utilised no
NFB. That is a lie. ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every
single one. What differs is the type and amount. You, of course, would not
want to tell your readers this little fact, would you?


There is no reason for NFB to be an
act of faith, like an on-off switch. For the record, quite contrary to
your silly claims about what I said, I believe the little NFB that
occurs naturally in triodes and in certain conservatively sanctioned
traditional topologies are A Good Thing.


**LIke I said: ALL amplifiers utilise NFB for linearisation. Every single
one.


To avoid giving you another
apoplectic fit, I shan't repeat what I think of the excessive amounts
of NFB required to make transistors work at all.


**And again, you lie. It is not necessary to use "excessive amounts" of NFB
to make a transistor work at all. In fact, modern transistors are more
linear than tubes and can, therefore, operate with less feedback, if
required. Because transistors are so cheap and reliable, most manufacturers
tend to use lots of them and, consequently, lots of NFB to linearise the
whole shebang.


If you think you can write a more compelling argument than I can about
the evils of excessive NFB, have at it. But every time I see you, like
the other techies you merely kibbitz what better men have written.


**I just point out your lies. Nothing more.


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au


  #22   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Patrick Turner
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB



Ruud Broens wrote:

"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
:
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: ...
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
:
: **In practice, there is no difference. A curent flowing through a resistance
: allows a Voltage to be developed = Voltage gain.
:
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
: **The difference is academic.
:
:
: excusez for not having included you on the ss
: shortlist.
: so, why not build flipper's frontend , completed with that
: Toshiba 2SC5200 for power
: & report back ?
:
: **Who's "flipper"?
:

he, are you playing inspector ClueSo?
or something ?
get a google clue
:-)
on rat
R.
: --
: Trevor Wilson
: www.rageaudio.com.au


Hooo is de Fleeper??

Maybeez he is dee BBIIGGG Fishy in de water, and he
SPLASH all over you with heez tail and make you so wet all over.

Patrick Turner.



:
:


  #23   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Andre Jute
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


Arny "I spoke in error" Krueger next tries hairsplitting:

"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back
from the output to the input amplifying device to offset
part of the harmonic distortion which is present as a
positive voltage.


Wrong. The voltage that is fed back in audio power amps is almost always
positive with respect to the input and output of the piece of equipment.
Therefore it is wrong to call it a negative voltage.


If you can't win the argument, redefine the standard terms.

Wrong. The voltage that is fed back in audio power amps is simply a fraction
of the output signal. It is not fed back to offset the distortion, but
rather is fed back to offset the foreward-going signal voltage.


If you can't win the argument, redefine it so narrowly that you can
split hairs about a single tiny piece.

It costs nothing except a loss of gain
and a few side effects such as phase shift and possible
instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against
depending on the level of NFB.


Wrong. Negative feedback always reduces phase shift. If misapplied it can
cause an amplifier to become less stable, but in fact when properly applied,
negative feedback increases stability.


If you can't win the argument on the specifics, shift ground to the
generality. State that misapplication will always be misapplication, as
if you have just discovered the dull truism.

Negative feedback increases stability in the sense that it stabilizes the
amplifiers most important technical parameters. For example consider the
gain of an amplifier. If there is no negative feedback, then the gain of an
amplifier is very much exposed to natural variations in the parameters of
its active devices whether they be tubes or solid state. For example, the
gain of both tubes and transistors can be very sensitive to temperature.
With negative feedback, the important parameters of the amplifier are set
by a pair of resistors, whose properties can be made to be very stable and
independent of temperature.


If you can't win the argument on its merits, drag in a lot of
extraneous considerations and pretend that each of them is the main
problem.

You should get the idea by wrong - Jute has no clue about what negative
feedback is, how it works, or what its real benefits are.


"You should get the idea by wrong" -- duh, Arny? Another Freudian slip?
It tells us poor little Arny, an old man, is still so childish that,
regardless of the facts, he insists on being right and everyone else
being wrong. What a moron.

If you want to be a hairdresser, Krueger, first you should realize that
the purpose of hairdressing is not to promote and increase split ends
but to prevent them. The same in audio with distortion. I thought you
claimed to be an engineer...

Andre Jute
In audio less is hedonism

  #24   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Andre Jute
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


Patrick Turner wrote:
Ruud Broens wrote:

"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...
:
: "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: ...
:
:
: we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
:
: **In practice, there is no difference. A curent flowing through a resistance
: allows a Voltage to be developed = Voltage gain.
:
: as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: doesn't seem unreasonable...
:
: **The difference is academic.
:
:
: excusez for not having included you on the ss
: shortlist.
: so, why not build flipper's frontend , completed with that
: Toshiba 2SC5200 for power
: & report back ?
:
: **Who's "flipper"?
:

he, are you playing inspector ClueSo?
or something ?
get a google clue
:-)
on rat
R.
: --
: Trevor Wilson
: www.rageaudio.com.au


Hooo is de Fleeper??

Maybeez he is dee BBIIGGG Fishy in de water, and he
SPLASH all over you with heez tail and make you so wet all over.

Patrick Turner.


Poor Trevor is wet all over already. The name of his firm, Rage Audio,
already tells you much about his character. The inchoate mouthfoaming
when he meets the slightest resistance is unnecessary confirmation.

Here's another truth to enrage poor Trevor: It would be easy to show
from the published texts that he and I are in agreement on NFB if only
he will open his mind. I don't suppose he will, though.

Andre Jute

  #25   Report Post  
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George M. Middius
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB



Andre Jute said to DebatingTradeBorg:

I thought you claimed to be an engineer...


Krooger has amended that claim. He now claims to be "Master of the
Debating Trade". Much more prestigious in his eyes.





--
A day without Krooger is like a day without arsenic.


  #26   Report Post  
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John Deans
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...

No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?
Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design. The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic. Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output. From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB. Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)

3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure, with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears. Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

And they still use Negative Feedback? Are they stupid?
No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output. The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically. The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS; if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1. Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB. Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier. But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects. In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already. All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear. This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!
That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'. This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time. NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels. We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

*******
More Zero Negative Feedback amplifiers at Jute on Amps
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/JUTE%20ON%20AMPS.htm
The KISS Amp project, which explains much more, is here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm
and its schematics and transfer curves are here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/KISS%20190.htm

********
THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.
GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP

All text and illustration is Copyright © Andre Jute 2001, 2004, 2006
and may not be reproduced except in the thread KISS xxx on
rec.audio.tubes


  #27   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Patrick Turner
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB



Andre Jute wrote:

I must say, Wilson, I don't understand why you're getting your knickers
in a knot. You're like those bolshies I used to know who claimed that
anyone who wasn't willing to kill for "socialism" was only play-acting.
Are you really claiming that someone who merely uses the NFB he finds
lurking in DHTs can't belong to the club until he repents and uses
excessive amounts of loop NFB? Are you really claiming that the use of
lots and lots of NFB is a prerequisite for good audio design? Are you
really claiming that because a little NFB is a good thing, an unlimited
amount must therefore be better, and an infinite amount best of all?
Seems a bit immoderate to me, old chap.


You will find yourself arguing at a man who has a head full of solid concrete.
Trev will never see the whole picture, and has never designed or built any amp in
the last 30 years.
I try not to bother arguing the same old tired BS time after time.
He just likes hanging out in news groups and Bull****ting.
He has NEVER once contributed a single article of constructive advice on tubecraft
at r.a.t.



Your hysterical belief that I am "against" NFB is the product of your
unsophisticated literal-mindedness. There is no reason for NFB to be an
act of faith, like an on-off switch. For the record, quite contrary to
your silly claims about what I said, I believe the little NFB that
occurs naturally in triodes and in certain conservatively sanctioned
traditional topologies are A Good Thing. To avoid giving you another
apoplectic fit, I shan't repeat what I think of the excessive amounts
of NFB required to make transistors work at all.

If you think you can write a more compelling argument than I can about
the evils of excessive NFB, have at it. But every time I see you, like
the other techies you merely kibbitz what better men have written.


I am now doing 845 amps, two per channel for 50 watts each.
I expect music to be real fine. Damping factor good, noise low,
bandwidth wide, distortions negligible and maybe I can add 6db of global NFB but
I doubt any difference due to some **added** NFB will be heard.

Trev has never done anything like this and simply doesn't understand.

With 845, just no need for the 106dB of added NFB used in SS amps.
I don't care a bit about what Trev says.

Patrick Turner.






Andre Jute

Trevor Wilson wrote:
"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Trevor Wilson wrote:
(a long commentary on my original post, all of it reproduced in full
below)

I never said an amp can work without NFB;


**Yes, you did. Several times, in fact.

that's your desperate spin on
the matter. In fact, I took part in a long thread which determined that
a 300B has about 12-14dB of internal or natural NFB.


**Then why do you persist in claiming that such an amp can exist with no
NFB?

You, Trevor
Wilson, know that what I actually believe is that most amps work better
without *added* negative feedback.


**I KNOW that you just published a bunch of lies and half truths. THAT is
what I DO know. If you want to publish a correction (which includes the
superior linearity of modern BJTs over triodes) then I will support you in
that endeavour.

And I told you so again:

It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output.

See the "added"? It makes clear to even the rawest newbie what I
intend.


**No, it does not. I deal daily with newbies (and a goodly number of those
who aren't newbies) about the issues surrounding NFB. Most have no idea that
ALL amplifiers use NFB of some type for linearisation. Many more have no
idea that a triode utilises and internal NFB system. You have merely
perpetuated these myths. If you want to explain stuff, then be precise. If
you mean local NFB, say so. If you mean Global NFB, say so. If you mean
nested NFB, say so. Each feedback system will affect any given amplifier in
different ways. As you well (or bloody well should) know.

No one who has been in high level tube amps for more than a
semester needs it spelled out.


**Bull****! I see it every day.

Everyone knows the convention is that an
amp without added NFB is described as having Zero Negative Feedback.


**Piling more bull**** on top, does not make it so. Spell out EXACTLY what
you mean when you speak of feedback and there'll be fewer problems. If you
mean Zero GLOBAL NFB, then say so. As you well know, not all SS amps utilise
Global NFB for linearisation. In fact, they use similar feedback methods to
your triode amps. And, surprise surprise, they often provide many of the
benefits often ascribed to triode amps, without the obvious shortcomings.
But you would not want to actually educate people, would you?

You, Trevor Wilson, cannot fail to know it, therefore you are picking
desperate nits


**Nope. I just get tired of people like you perpetuating lies and half
truths.

-- and giving away your desperation by hysterically
screeching your misleading lie "no such thing as a ZNFB amp" over and
over again, probably more than twenty times (those who care can count
below).


**If you can manage some honesty and accuracy, then I would not nbeed to
correct your mistakes (lies?).


Your problem is that you know I'm right but that you have thirty years
invested in commercially telling people tubes are obsolete.


**You have no idea.


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au


  #28   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
John Deans
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

Just another Hi Fi nut who has built an amp thinks it sounds good but is it
accurate or a nice sound
negative feedback is almost necessary in transistor amps used well it works
fine and much has been written on good transistor amp design
I will put my pro transistor amps against most valve amps anyway
Tinted glasses make the world look better but are they accurate

..
"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...

No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?
Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design. The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic. Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output. From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB. Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)

3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure, with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears. Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

And they still use Negative Feedback? Are they stupid?
No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output. The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically. The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS; if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1. Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB. Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier. But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects. In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already. All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear. This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!
That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'. This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time. NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels. We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

*******
More Zero Negative Feedback amplifiers at Jute on Amps
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/JUTE%20ON%20AMPS.htm
The KISS Amp project, which explains much more, is here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm
and its schematics and transfer curves are here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/KISS%20190.htm

********
THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.
GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP

All text and illustration is Copyright © Andre Jute 2001, 2004, 2006
and may not be reproduced except in the thread KISS xxx on
rec.audio.tubes


  #29   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 19:49:18 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
wrote:


"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
.. .
: On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 17:57:12 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: wrote:
:
: : : Where's the beef?
: : :
: : they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
: : why keep claiming it is "superior" ?
: :
: : Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
: : is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
: : bendy.
:
: yeah, right, as in 0.007 % distortion kinda bendy.
: must be what they call 'the scottish bend',
: then
:
: Be more specific about the tubed circuit you claim has this level of
: distortion.
:

eehhrrmm,
don't think that earlier suggestion of a scottish detective will
work out,
after all,

thanks for detecting,
not even well above noise level,
lot'sZZ


In other words, you made it up.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
  #30   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
...
: On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 19:49:18 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: wrote:
:
:
: "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
: .. .
: : On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 17:57:12 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: : wrote:
: :
: : : : Where's the beef?
: : : :
: : : they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my
banana -
: : : why keep claiming it is "superior" ?
: : :
: : : Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
: : : is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
: : : bendy.
: :
: : yeah, right, as in 0.007 % distortion kinda bendy.
: : must be what they call 'the scottish bend',
: : then
: :
: : Be more specific about the tubed circuit you claim has this level of
: : distortion.
: :
:
: eehhrrmm,
: don't think that earlier suggestion of a scottish detective will
: work out,
: after all,
:
: thanks for detecting,
: not even well above noise level,
: lot'sZZ
:
: In other words, you made it up.
: --
:
: Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

as my track record is pretty impressive in that respect,
i can afford this one:

see my upcoming movie: Tweak City
, , starring Kyra

evidently,
Rudy




  #31   Report Post  
Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Sander deWaal
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

"Ruud Broens" said:


see my upcoming movie: Tweak City
, , starring Kyra



Does it perhaps involve aspirins, for when she 'pretends' having a
headache?


I recommend Mundorf aspirins for critical applications ;-)

--

- Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. -
  #32   Report Post  
Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Ruud Broens
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Sander deWaal" wrote in message
...
: "Ruud Broens" said:
:
:
: see my upcoming movie: Tweak City
: , , starring Kyra
:
:
: Does it perhaps involve aspirins, for when she 'pretends' having a
: headache?
:
:
: I recommend Mundorf aspirins for critical applications ;-)
:
: --
:
: - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with
experience. -

I agree,
that could make of the difference between
knightly & dayly

Ry


  #33   Report Post  
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Andre Jute
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


Patrick Turner wrote:
Andre Jute wrote:

I must say, Wilson, I don't understand why you're getting your knickers
in a knot. You're like those bolshies I used to know who claimed that
anyone who wasn't willing to kill for "socialism" was only play-acting.
Are you really claiming that someone who merely uses the NFB he finds
lurking in DHTs can't belong to the club until he repents and uses
excessive amounts of loop NFB? Are you really claiming that the use of
lots and lots of NFB is a prerequisite for good audio design? Are you
really claiming that because a little NFB is a good thing, an unlimited
amount must therefore be better, and an infinite amount best of all?
Seems a bit immoderate to me, old chap.


You will find yourself arguing at a man who has a head full of solid concrete.
Trev will never see the whole picture, and has never designed or built any amp in
the last 30 years.


He's mindless, for sure. All those mindlessly insistent claims that I
said something I didn't say -- right next to the place where I said
exactly the opposite.

I try not to bother arguing the same old tired BS time after time.
He just likes hanging out in news groups and Bull****ting.
He has NEVER once contributed a single article of constructive advice on tubecraft
at r.a.t.


Doesn't surprise me.

Your hysterical belief that I am "against" NFB is the product of your
unsophisticated literal-mindedness. There is no reason for NFB to be an
act of faith, like an on-off switch. For the record, quite contrary to
your silly claims about what I said, I believe the little NFB that
occurs naturally in triodes and in certain conservatively sanctioned
traditional topologies are A Good Thing. To avoid giving you another
apoplectic fit, I shan't repeat what I think of the excessive amounts
of NFB required to make transistors work at all.

If you think you can write a more compelling argument than I can about
the evils of excessive NFB, have at it. But every time I see you, like
the other techies you merely kibbitz what better men have written.


I am now doing 845 amps, two per channel for 50 watts each.
I expect music to be real fine. Damping factor good, noise low,
bandwidth wide, distortions negligible and maybe I can add 6db of global NFB but
I doubt any difference due to some **added** NFB will be heard.


You probably won't need the NFB. The biggest problem with 845 is not
deciding how much NFB to use but steeling yourself to let them out of
the door. 845 are God's own tube. I really hesitated when I needed the
space, wondering if I shouldn't keep the simple SET 845 rather than my
Millennium's End SV572-xx amps.

Trev has never done anything like this and simply doesn't understand.


It's not so difficult to open your mind to new experiences and new
ideas. But first one has to stop being a smartarse, and that I don't
think poor old Trevor can manage.

With 845, just no need for the 106dB of added NFB used in SS amps.
I don't care a bit about what Trev says.


I'm fast reaching the same conclusion.

Patrick Turner.


Andre Jute

  #34   Report Post  
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 17:57:12 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
wrote:


"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
.. .
: On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 12:59:37 +0100, "Ruud Broens"
: wrote:
:
: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message
: ...
: : "Ruud Broens" wrote in message
: :
: :
: : we've been through this 'linearity contest' before, here.
: : whereas you define it in terms of current amplification,
: : i define it in terms of voltage amplification.
: : as real-world interfacing in audio is with *voltages*,
: : doesn't seem unreasonable...
: :
: :
: : Negative feedback is generally used to make amplifiers more linear in the
: : voltage domain. It's a highly sucessful strategy. We sent men to the moon,
: : partially based on amplifiers that were linearized with negative feedback.
: :
: : Where's the beef?
: :
: they 'beef' is, your banana needs 1K more straightening' than my banana -
: why keep claiming it is "superior" ?
:
: Because what matters is the output of the *final* circuit - the banana
: is perfectly straight in the opamp, but your tube circuit is still
: bendy.

yeah, right, as in 0.007 % distortion kinda bendy.
must be what they call 'the scottish bend',
then


Be more specific about the tubed circuit you claim has this level of
distortion.

--

It's there in the RAT thread Hybrid circuit-CQ something or other.

  #35   Report Post  
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Patrick Turner
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


If you think you can write a more compelling argument than I can about
the evils of excessive NFB, have at it. But every time I see you, like
the other techies you merely kibbitz what better men have written.


I am now doing 845 amps, two per channel for 50 watts each.
I expect music to be real fine. Damping factor good, noise low,
bandwidth wide, distortions negligible and maybe I can add 6db of global NFB but
I doubt any difference due to some **added** NFB will be heard.


You probably won't need the NFB. The biggest problem with 845 is not
deciding how much NFB to use but steeling yourself to let them out of
the door. 845 are God's own tube. I really hesitated when I needed the
space, wondering if I shouldn't keep the simple SET 845 rather than my
Millennium's End SV572-xx amps.


And I am using KR845.....

I think I'll use sepaarate cathode biasing for each 845, tubes and a trioded EL34
driving a 1:1
IST but with a cap shunting the anode to secondary winding to make sure the
HF transfer is near perfect without the leakage inductance having any effect.
Input will be 6SN7, but maybe could be 6SL7 µ follower



Trev has never done anything like this and simply doesn't understand.


It's not so difficult to open your mind to new experiences and new
ideas. But first one has to stop being a smartarse, and that I don't
think poor old Trevor can manage.


He regards SET amplification as a form of hi-fi illegitimacy.
Calling people *******s for owning and preferring SE amps to his fav brands of solid
state
makes him look a fool.



With 845, just no need for the 106dB of added NFB used in SS amps.
I don't care a bit about what Trev says.


I'm fast reaching the same conclusion.

Patrick Turner.


Andre Jute


A colleague in Sydney is doing an SE amp with 6 x GM70 for 120 watts.
But it will be switchable to PP......its doable, 5 very good switches are needed, and I
did the OPT design.

Whether the GM70 is better than 845 is unknown.

I like challenges. The OPT for 845 has 3 times the turns that my 300 watt PP amps have,
and the wire is thinner for 845, and my eyes are not getting younger....

Patrick Turner,





  #36   Report Post  
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Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

On 24 Mar 2006 14:01:45 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:

Patrick Turner wrote:


I am now doing 845 amps, two per channel for 50 watts each.
I expect music to be real fine. Damping factor good, noise low,
bandwidth wide, distortions negligible and maybe I can add 6db of global NFB but
I doubt any difference due to some **added** NFB will be heard.


Depends on the speakers, the reduced output impedance may be useful.

You probably won't need the NFB. The biggest problem with 845 is not
deciding how much NFB to use but steeling yourself to let them out of
the door. 845 are God's own tube. I really hesitated when I needed the
space, wondering if I shouldn't keep the simple SET 845 rather than my
Millennium's End SV572-xx amps.


It's an excellent tube, as tubes go, but of course we've had seventy
years of progress since then.......

Trev has never done anything like this and simply doesn't understand.


It's not so difficult to open your mind to new experiences and new
ideas. But first one has to stop being a smartarse, and that I don't
think poor old Trevor can manage.


You of course would be the master of this art - except that your arse
is the smartest part of you.

With 845, just no need for the 106dB of added NFB used in SS amps.
I don't care a bit about what Trev says.


With SS, no need for the massive cost of the output transformer for 50
watts of single-ended tube amplification, plus of course you get much
better linearity than even the mighty 845 can manage. A really good
60-watt SS amp is very easy to implement these days - and you can buy
one for the cost of a pair of those OPTs...............

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
----------------------------------------------------------
** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY **
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  #37   Report Post  
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Arny Krueger
 
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Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

"Bret Ludwig" wrote in message
oups.com
Ruud Broens wrote:

snip


The opamp is *designed* to use large amounts of
linearising
feedback, something that simply isn't an option with
the inherently much lower open-loop gain of tubes.


Philbrick and Julie were building perfectly proper op
amps with tubes as early as 1943, but thanks for playing.


Actually, tubed operational amps, especially the early ones (the specific
ones you're mentioning), were horrors. If the noise and drift didn't get
you, the short parts life would.

Operational amplifiers were originally designed as parts for analog
computers. When SS op amps for analog computers became commercial, analog
computer experts sighed a huge sigh of relief. They were stable, reliable,
and quiet.



  #38   Report Post  
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John Stewart
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB

John Deans wrote:

"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...

No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?
Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design. The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic. Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output. From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB. Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)

3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure, with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears. Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

And they still use Negative Feedback? Are they stupid?
No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output. The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically. The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS; if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1. Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB. Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier. But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects. In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already. All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear. This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!
That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'. This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time. NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels. We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

*******
More Zero Negative Feedback amplifiers at Jute on Amps
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/JUTE%20ON%20AMPS.htm
The KISS Amp project, which explains much more, is here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm
and its schematics and transfer curves are here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/KISS%20190.htm

********
THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.
GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP

All text and illustration is Copyright © Andre Jute 2001, 2004, 2006
and may not be reproduced except in the thread KISS xxx on
rec.audio.tubes


Bunk. JLS

  #39   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion,rec.audio.tubes
John Stewart
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB



John Deans wrote:

"Andre Jute" wrote in message
ups.com...
Some meterhead clown demands to know:
What's wrong with feedback?

and another meterhead clown, on being told by Rudy that:
an OPA2604 ... needs a *thousand* times more feedback

demands to know:
So what?


*****
It ain't rocket science. Explanation taken from:
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm

*****
CATCH-22
*****
The customer complained that his new suit didn't fit. 'The sleeves are
too short,' he said to the tailor.

'Yes sir,' said the tailor, 'but if you hold your arm just so, at an
angle as if you're drinking tea with your auntie, it will show just the
right amount of cuff.'

The customer tried it. The tailor was right! 'But what about the other
sleeve? It is definitely too short.'

'Just lower your shoulder, sir. Yes, yes, a little more. Put your foot
out so you can lower your shoulder a little more still. Bend your knee.
Yes, that's it. See how beautifully your suitcoat now fits?'

The customer had to admit the tailor was right. 'Wow. But now the leg
of the pants is all twisted around.'

'That's easily fixed,' said the tailor. 'Just point your other toe
westward, sir, and look over your shoulder to where I am holding up the
hand mirror. See? Doesn't that fit beautifully?'

'Yes,' the customer said doubtfully, 'but-'

'Now would sir like to wear his brilliant new suit or shall we wrap
it?'

The customer was too intimidated to argue. He walked out into the
street in his new suit, his arm crooked as if he were drinking tea, his
other shoulder well down over a bent knee with his foot out to the
side, his other foot pointing westwards, his head twisted back between
hunched shoulders as if complaining to God about a cruel fate.

Behind him he heard a boy say to his father. 'Oh, Daddy, look at the
poor twisted cripple.'

'Hush,' the father said. 'Be grateful the poor man found such a
brilliant tailor.'

****

The Ultrafidelista view of Negative Feedback
by Andre Jute
Negative feedback is the paradigm of modern electronic design. It is
mother's milk to an electronics engineer. He learns to say '100dB of
NFB,' in his sleep before he finishes his first week at the most humble
polytechnic. At the great institutions the professor of feedback is the
most honoured man in the department. In Massachusetts and Minnesota the
feedback guru is the most honoured man on the entire campus, equal in
stature to the football coach. When a guru of transistor high fidelity
(and some in tubes) says, 'I studied under Ron,' one doesn't have to
ask which Ron, one just knows it is the holy name of the prophet of
feedback from the Midwest.

Before I even finished the design of the KISS 300B it was forcefully
suggested by a wannabe guru that with only 50dB more gain (about seven
times as much as is likely to be in the actual design) I can apply 50dB
of negative feedback to linearize my amplifier.

Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the
audio engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived,
non-existent. They don't even ask if there is a problem, they swing the
club of NFB regardless. NFB has become a reflex axiom of mainstream
audio design. An audio engineer with his negative feedback is like a
policeman who runs out into the street with his stick and starts
beating a confession out of the first housewife he sees. The difference
is that the policeman is relieved of duty to await punishment and the
audio engineer gets away with it. In the case of the policeman it is
unacceptable behaviour, in the case of the audio engineer so much the
expected norm that no one except the ultrafidelista notice. I guess
that if one in ten million audio amplifiers does not have negative
feedback added, it will be a lot...

No one asked if my KISS Amp requires linearization. The presumption by
all except those already of the ultrafidelista persuasion was that I
would welcome suggestions about A Good Thing.

In the face of such overwhelming acceptance by qualified engineers, why
do we as ultrafidelista not take the same easy path of negative
feedback? Especially considering that superficially NFB is easy to
understand and apply.

How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output
to the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic
distortion which is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing
except a loss of gain and a few side effects such as phase shift and
possible instability which are well known in the mathematical
literature and more or less easily guarded against depending on the
level of NFB.

'Wow!' those meeting NFB for the first time will now say, 'Something
for free! I'll grab some of that for my amp.' Hey, I said it, and I am
a professional intellectual, by definition an infinite skeptic. NFB is
a thing of beauty that will draw you in. It is like an electronic
Marxism which admits of no contrary arguments because it has subsumed
them all into The Holy Measurements. To question The Measurements is to
commit heresy. You need to be of strong mind to resist the
blandishments of such a universal panacea and of strong stomach to
withstand the hysterical assaults of the lesser engineers defending
their holy grail. (And when you do get hold of a superior engineer to
explain NFB to you, you need to be high-domed indeed because suddenly
NFB can turn very intricate.)

Unfortunately NFB doesn't come without a price. It levies a cruel
charge on the perceived quality of the sound. Negative feedback is what
gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big PP tube amps their
chillingly unnatural sound.

Then how did NFB come to be such a panacea in amplifier design?
Your guess is as good as mine. Hi-fi design is not prestige work for
engineers, or highly paid. The most talented and best qualified
engineers go into automobiles or military hardware or big construction
projects or computer design. The left-overs design amplifiers in the
time they have to spare from writing up specs for requesting a CE mark
for a new electric kettle. Lemmings storming en masse over a cliff come
to mind; such people don't see the necessity of original thought, or
have the mental equipment for it. The exceptions to this rule are
normally audio enthusiasts in charge of their own small audio
manufactories with niche markets; those who grow larger from this base
follow the mainstream mantra of "mo' NFB give lowa' THD" because the
marketing channels demand it from them if they wish to grow. At this
point they usually cease to offer anything different, only the
exclusivity of a very high price. (I know, because a sub-board I
designed for a supplier to the trade turns up in so many very expensive
amps with so many different big names neatly silkscreened on it... it
strikes me as the sort of detail a real designer, as distinct from a
marketer, would take under his own control.) Those very few makers who
will sell you an ultrafi amp without any NFB operate even tinier shops,
usually one man and a cat, just hanging on.

The mechanism by which NFB wrecks your sound
Negative feedback at first acquaintance sounds good enough to take to
bed and cuddle. It isn't. It isn't even as simple as a superficial
acquaintance may suggest. Follow the steps with me, from the theory as
she is received to what arrives at your brain as music:

1. In theory NFB reduces all harmonic distortion equally, without
discrimination. Strictly in theory it does not reshape harmonic
distortion by reducing the most objectionable third and higher order
odd harmonic distortion to a greater extent than the relatively
harmless 2nd harmonic. Thus NFB at its theoretically most benign is
already useless in terms of psychoacoustics, as will become clear at
point 4. If you disregard psychoacoustics, as many audio engineers do,
NFB is brilliant in reducing total harmonic distortion to a number as
tiny as you want. You just pile on more NFB.

2. In real life, as distinct from simplified theory, NFB adds artifacts
of its own. Remember, it is a loop. The signal starts at the input and
is amplified by devices until it reaches the output. From the output a
part of the signal called the negative feedback is fed back to the
input. Here a loop is completed and the combination, less distorted,
reaches the output again, a part of the combination is fed back,
endlessly. The artifacts we want to consider here are created by the
fed-back residue of harmonic distortions adding to both the fundamental
and the distortions already created by the amplifier, then some portion
of the sum of the original and the feedback distortion is fed back
again and added on, until the ooh-ah bird flies up its own fundament.
It looks marginally less disgusting as a recursive mathematical formula
with lots of nested parenthetical parcels of noise being loaded onto
your music. But it is a monkey on the back of your sound, with a
smaller monkey on the back of the first monkey, a still smaller monkey
on the back of the second monkey, and so on ad infinitum. These
additive artifacts are all higher harmonics and the more dominant ones
are all odd. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed
ultrafidelista amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics
before NFB. Add NFB and the second harmonic will be lowered but the
recombinant new loop now contains newly added intermodulation effects
between the fundamental and the residual second harmonic, and that is
third harmonic. In the next cycle a small but nasty dose of fifth
harmonic that wasn't there before is added by interaction between the
still residual second harmonic and reduced newly added third harmonic.
In short, the artifacts NFB adds to the distortion mix are all of the
most harmful kind. But, say the proponents of NFB, so what? Every time
the loop cycles the added artifacts are smaller, even if there are more
of them... The whole affair starts to smell of trying to argue with a
Marxist who simply declares any inconvenient truth 'an anomaly'. (If
this sounds like a mess from which you should run a mile, you have come
to the right conclusion. Start running now. It gets worse.)

3. We thus arrive at a situation where distortion has been lowered by
NFB but where the most disturbing odd harmonic distortions are still
present to some measure, with the added disadvantage that new and
extremely disturbing artifacts of higher harmonic distortions have been
created by the very process of using negative feedback to lower
distortion. Regardless of the absolute level of THD, or the volume
setting, the mix of harmonics has been adversely affected and now
includes a higher proportion of third and higher harmonics than before
NFB. Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will
make up a greater part of the distortion than before.

4. Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile
listening because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like
to keep our ears. Unfortunately for the lowest common denominator of
hi-fi designer, the one who specifies NFB as a conditioned response
much like Pavlov's dogs slavered when the bell rang, human physiology
and psycho-acoustic response is such that odd harmonics are
disproportionately more disturbing at lower than at higher listening
levels. This inescapable effect is independent of definition of
'listening level.' At the 110dB in-room SPL (only 14dB louder than an
automatic riveter!) advocated by the already deaf Transient Overload
Elite known on newsgroups as the Borg, this poisonous concoction of
original distortions and NFB recombinant artifacts will be least
disturbing (and soon not heard at all!). At any lower level perceived
interference of this harmonics cocktail with the music will increase in
inverse proportion to the volume level. At low volume levels the
artifacts generated by NFB will by their nature as higher harmonic
distortions be disproportionately far more disturbing. At these normal
listening levels 0.75 per cent of second harmonic distortion may be
below the threshhold of perception for sophisticated listeners, whereas
tiny amounts of third and higher odd harmonic distortions grate.

And they still use Negative Feedback? Are they stupid?
No, they are not stupid. Most of them march to the drum of a cost
accountant on whom we wouldn't spit if he were alight. NFB is as cheap
in money terms as it is expensive in terms of perceived quality of
music. We shall come to those who claim to be sympathetic to
high-fidelity but insist on devices which do not work without NFB, who
have another devious answer. Here, meanwhile, for you to keep in mind,
is a single-sentence summary of a complicated interdisciplinary
argument:

The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure
is worse than the disease.

But surely we don't have to do anything so stupid?
It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output. The intrinsically linear
device is the thermionic tube in either its triode form or as a pentode
hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most pleasing alternative
both economically and sonically. The topology is often single-ended
operation, chosen also for several other reasons described elsewhere in
these articles, including KISS; if the chosen topology is push-pull
operation, which is more difficult but far from impossible to arrange
without NFB, operation should be specified as Class A1. Inside the
argued case above lies too the overwhelming reason to accept the
potential small disadvantage that may accompany the preferred topology
in comparison to the discarded alternatives. The disadvantage is of
course the potential for a residual second harmonic that measures high
by transistor or NFB tube standards. (Note the word potential. With a
conservatively designed DHT amp the potential problem should not
arise.)

The ultrafidelista, who are as keen on silent amps as anyone else,
accept this small potential difficulty because it is the lesser evil
compared to NFB. Unbelievers (largely unwashed, according to reports)
sneer that ultrafidelista like this approach because of the 'added
euphonics', which is bow-wow techie talk for the warmth a big chunk of
second harmonic lays on a zero negative feedback single-ended
amplifier. But competent design can easily reduce the level of second
harmonic to below the level of perception without the need for NFB and
its deleterious after-effects. In any event, it is your amplifier. You
paid for it. You have a right to tune it as you please. The key thing
is to get rid of NFB and to understand why you did it.

Can we prove any of this scientifically?
We have already. All of this is the technical subtext to my longtime
contention that what the ultrafidelista hear and love is not a directly
heated triode sound as is claimed by many enthusiasts but a Class A1,
ZNFB sound. (Admittedly, as we have seen above, the right sound is
virtually guaranteed with a ZNFB DHT SE amp of conservative provenance
but may have to be developed the hard way with more economical or
higher-power contenders.) In comparative ABX tests conducted over a
number of years, I found that professional musicians, certified golden
ears, choose the triode-linked Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is
present in the test over all other contenders including SE 300B and
'blameless' high-NFB silicon.

Science also proceeds by pure reason. Ultrafidelista have long doubted
whether what engineers insist we measure (the absolute level of
distortion, THD) predicts success in audio gear. This is the full
circle, because I have just proven by logical, individually uncontested
steps that what matters, once a certain modest level of silence is
assured to an amplifier, is not the absolute level of disharmonics but
their composition. The same proof demonstrates that a more beneficial
distribution follows instantly from doing without NFB.

But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!
That is not our problem. Those who choose inefficient speakers and
consequently are forced to accept monstrous amps made possible only by
gigadeciBels of NFB, will receive our sympathy - and the music they
deserve.

Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where
the measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism,
pretend to be enthusiasts for NFB. To make it work for them, they have
attempted to change the rules so that we won't hear what their
treasured NFB does to our sound. They sneer that low level listening,
which 99 per cent of us prefer and where NFB does most to wreck the
sound, is 'easy listening' and therefore not permissible. According to
them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume level which
suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'. This is a contemptible
circular argument, only too characteristic of a fascist mentality in a
part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to prescribe their arid
vision without regard for our enjoyment.

We can recommend a good tailor to them. It hurts every time you wear
his suit. No pain, no gain, fellers!

In summary
Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time. NFB wrecks
everybody's sound at all levels but most wretchedly at normal listening
levels. We started out with a contemptible circular argument and we
have met another along the way. We can now put both in context:

An 'engineer' who designs an amplifier which does not work perfectly
without negative feedback is like a tailor cutting the suit
incompetently and then demanding that you walk like a cripple to make
it fit, so that everyone can admire the brilliance of your tailor.

Negative feedback is a bodge. That is why it is despicable to the
ultrafidelista.

*******
More Zero Negative Feedback amplifiers at Jute on Amps
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/JUTE%20ON%20AMPS.htm
The KISS Amp project, which explains much more, is here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm
and its schematics and transfer curves are here
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/KISS%20190.htm

********
THE VOLTAGES IN THIS AMP WILL KILL YOU.
GET EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION IF IT IS YOUR FIRST TUBE AMP

All text and illustration is Copyright © Andre Jute 2001, 2004, 2006
and may not be reproduced except in the thread KISS xxx on
rec.audio.tubes


Bunk. JLS

  #40   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
Trevor Wilson
 
Posts: n/a
Default The Catch-22 of Negative Feedback aka NFB


"Andre Jute" wrote in message
oups.com...
Trevor Wilson wrote:
Incorrect and innappropriate application
of NFB can damage an amplifier's performance.


Now you're getting it, sonny.


**Then say so. Stop telling half-truths. There is NOTHING wrong with NFB, as
long as it is appropriately applied.

Next, try not to describe as a liar
anyone who doesn't instantly subscribe to your fanatical faith in Blow
Jobs from Transvestites (BJTs) and soon the rest of us might take you
seriously.


**I only tell it like it is.

Here are a few of your lies (some of which you have backtracked on):

"Negative feedback, shorthanded as NFB, is the instant response of the audio
engineering fraternity to all ills, real, perceived, non-existent."

"How does negative feedback work?
Negative feedback is simply a negative voltage fed back from the output to
the input amplifying device to offset part of the harmonic distortion which
is present as a positive voltage. It costs nothing except a loss of gain and
a few side effects such as phase shift and possible instability which are
well known in the mathematical literature and more or less easily guarded
against depending on the level of NFB."

"Negative feedback is what gives all those 'blameless' transistor and big
PP tube amps their chillingly unnatural sound."

"(I know, because a sub-board I designed for a supplier to the trade turns
up in so many very expensive amps with so many different big names neatly
silkscreened on it..."

" Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, a superbly designed ultrafidelista
amp with some second harmonic and zero odd harmonics before NFB."

"Let me say that again: after NFB, third and higher harmonics will make up a
greater part of the distortion than before."

"Low volume levels perforce accounts for 99 per cent of audiophile listening
because we all have families or neighbours, and we would like to keep our
ears."

"And they still use Negative Feedback?"

"The case against NFB is that for 99 per cent of listening the NFB cure is
worse than the disease."

"It follows from the argument above that ultrafidelista should choose an
intrinsically linear topology and device which does not require added
negative feedback to 'linearize' the output."

"The intrinsically linear device is the thermionic tube in either its triode
form or as a pentode hogtied to work as a triode, which can be a most
pleasing alternative both economically and sonically."

"In comparative ABX tests conducted over a number of years, I found that
professional musicians, certified golden ears, choose the triode-linked
Class A1 PP ZNFB EL34 whenever it is present in the test over all other
contenders including SE 300B and 'blameless' high-NFB silicon."

"But transistor amps won't work at all without NFB!"

"Engineering hangers-on of transistor attempts at high fidelity, where the
measure of success is vanishing THD rather than sonic hedonism, pretend to
be enthusiasts for NFB."

"They sneer that low level listening, which 99 per cent of us prefer"

"According to them we should all be forced to listen at the high volume
level which suits NFB amps, which they call 'realistic'."

"This is a contemptible circular argument, only too characteristic of a
fascist mentality in a part of the audiophile spectrum which wants to
prescribe their arid vision without regard for our enjoyment."

"Almost everyone listens at low level most of the time."

"Negative feedback is a bodge."


Would you care to amend these lies and state PRECISELY what you mean?


--
Trevor Wilson
www.rageaudio.com.au








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