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#41
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![]() Andre Jute wrote: 1. Jute explains everything. Jute never explains when posturing, pontification and disingenuity are available options. Graham |
#42
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![]() tony sayer wrote: Andre Jute writes flipper wrote: Andre Jute wrote: You do know that DC filaments on DHT sound like ****, don't you I, too, would like to hear that explained. You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Do many posters here go to concert halls all that much?. They rarely sound like what you'd want to hear at home ![]() I go to live gigs. Graham |
#43
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![]() Andre Jute wrote: Eeyore wrote: Andre Jute wrote: John Byrns wrote: I suspect you are actually looking for an explanation of the physics that make AC heating sound better than DC heating, but the important thing is the sound. I can't see why Poopie should need the physics explained to him. He claims to be an engineering graduate of the University of London. Surely, he should be explaining the physics to us, rather than the other way round. It was discussed in some reasonable depth here quite recently in fact. Well then, Poopie, you can start work by offering us a summary. You don't even have to do any work of your own. Why don't you just read the thread ? Graham |
#44
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On 14 Jan 2007 15:48:00 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 20:07:06 GMT, (Don Pearce) wrote: On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 13:23:13 -0600, John Byrns wrote: Can you explain in more detail the "Gaincard method" of counting components in the signal path? Ignoring the fact that you don't seem to be including the output transformer in your count, I still can't duplicate your count for the "KISS Amp WE300B SE Ultrafi" A much more interesting number is those components that can do something to the signal. Those are either the ones in the direct signal path or those that have a signal voltage across them. Some components in the signal path have essentially zero signal voltage across them and are thereby incapable of altering the signal. Now, counting properly, components in the direct signal path are Input pot 4 by 220R grid stopper First valve Coupling cap 220R grid stopper Second valve transformer 47k feedback r 200uf B1 decoupler That's 12 Thanks for the effort, Pearce. I wasn't seriously putting forward the Gaincard method of counting, just throwing it in for discussion while I get on with the business of designing and building my next amp. However, the grid leak resistor which you call the "47k feedback r" raises an interesting point of difference between the silicon crowd and the zero negative feedback ultrafidelista faithful. You intend to mean by negative feedback *any* feedback. By convention tubies in general and ultrafidelista in particular by negative feedback mean global or universal or loop negative feedback, certainly nothing contained within one stage of any of the classical topologies (including those newly revived like the mu stage). Even a cathode follower, surely a feedback device!, is kosher to the ZNFB crowd, and they have often resented me for pointing it out as much as the silicon slime has resented me for pointing out *their* wishful thinking and other depredations on the immutable laws of physics. (Hey, there are some tubies who still want to lynch me ten years later for puncturing their bubble on SRPP, which until I made an irrefutable analysis they happily promoted for thirty years as a constant current-loaded triode, which of course it isn't.) My error on the 47k - apologies tendered. But then you beg the question (and I mean that in the true sense of the logical fallacy), when you start to claim that feedback isn't feedback because you define it thus. Well, I have news for you. Feedback IS feedback, however you apply it. If the output signal is capable of comparison with the input and thereby reducing some of its error, you have feedback - live with it and don't try your nonsense with me. You may get away with it with your dullard mates, so stick with them. The signal handling components with first order effects are Battery 10 anode load 200uF B2 decoupler 47k grid leak 56uf cathode decoupler 1k cathode load That makes 18 total. You counted the "47k feedback r" (the grid leak, without which the amp won't work) twice. Buggered if I can see the relevance of the number though. Any signal that hits this amp has already been through a few hundred other components. Of course the whole thing makes a bit of sense when you consider that the components in this amp are doing a disproportionately huge amount of damage to the signal. Which they are. Ultrafi is an interestingly ironic name, don't you think? It is rather interesting that you don't ask for the noise figures of my tube amp before you start spouting condemnations based on your prejudicial preference for silicon bodged nearly right with excessive negative feedback. Why would I give a toss about the noise figure of a power amp? It didn't even occur to me that you might screw that up. Have you? Perhaps you should at least draw the loadline on the tube transfer curves and calculate the distortion before you spout off, Pearce. If you know how, of course. You might surprise yourself. (I hesitate to suggest that you build the design and measure for yourself; I wouldn't want you to electrocute yourself on unaccustomed high voltage or burn yourself with your new soldering iron.) d Sorry, miscounted. I hadn't spotted the two 100 ohm resistors and 100 ohm pot forming the series feedback network on the output valve were carrying signal. Hang - this amp is not meant to have any feedback - what are they doing there? They're humbusters for the AC filaments. You do know that DC filaments on DHT sound like ****, don't you, Pearce? Now go on, tell me about the joys of regulation. So you are claiming that an unbypassed cathode resistor is NOT a voltage feedback system? Your technical abilities plumb yet greater depths. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Always great to hear from you, Pearce. It gives me a warm glow of superiority that a famous engineer like you, a proven hostile to tube amps, can find only twee tiny quibbles when I publish a design. When you publish a design claiming it to have no feedback, and I can show that it does indeed use feedback, you can expect me to speak. Bull**** always stinks. When you claim there are only six components in the signal path and I count 17 (yes, still apologies for the miscount and misidentification - apropos of which you might want to redraw the schematic to make that 57k look a bit less like a feedback resistor), you can expect me to speak. Even you should be able to count a bit better than that. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#45
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On 14 Jan 2007 18:02:34 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:
You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Do explain how the tone quality is under your control. With tube amps you get what you get and there is bugger all you can do about it. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#46
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"John Byrns" wrote in message
In article , Eeyore wrote: Andre Jute wrote: flipper wrote: Andre Jute wrote: You do know that DC filaments on DHT sound like ****, don't you I, too, would like to hear that explained. You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Absence of any answer noted. It sounded like an answer to me, essentially what he suggested was that you try it both with DC, and then with AC and choose the one that sounds best to you. A lot of people seem to prefer the sonics of AC heating, and I will give it my vote too, the only major downside of AC heating being a greater difficulty in banishing the last vestiges of hum. I suspect you are actually looking for an explanation of the physics that make AC heating sound better than DC heating, but the important thing is the sound. Two words: sighted evaluation. |
#47
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"tony sayer" wrote in message
In article om, Andre Jute writes flipper wrote: Andre Jute wrote: You do know that DC filaments on DHT sound like ****, don't you I, too, would like to hear that explained. You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Do many posters here go to concert halls all that much?. They rarely sound like what you'd want to hear at home ![]() More to the point, most audiophiles long ago observed that tubed amps aren't worth the trouble or expense. |
#48
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![]() "Eeyore" wrote in message ... Andre Jute wrote: What happenened was that John Byrns kindly explained *my* thoughts on the matter Because you're incapable of doing it yourself I note. Graham You don't have to take Andre's word (or anyone else's word) for it Graham - try it for yourself:-) Take off your engineer's hat, put on your musician's hat, and listen to the music. People who have actual hands-on experience with building SET amps will confirm that there is a difference, but you need to prove it for yourself, as I am doing. It's a good test for your levels of aural perception:-) Regards to all Iain |
#49
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. More to the point, most audiophiles long ago observed that tubed amps aren't worth the trouble or expense. Arny. I don't know about the situation in the US but here in Scandinavia your statement could not be more wrong:-( A recent survey here has shown that the top of the high-end market for music systems (not home theatre) is totally dominated by tube amplifiers. My local dealer, who also supplies professional equipment will offer an SS Crown or Krell at a very attractively discounted price. For a CJ or any other good tube amp the customer must pay full retail and wait up to three months. Most are happy to do so. To endorse the confidence in their products, many bespoke amp builders now offer a 5 year warranty on tube amps. There is more interest in tube audio now than for many years. People are keen, I am told, to trade in their SS equipment for something which better satisfies their musical taste (their words to the dealer) A tube amp is invariably their choice. No-one I have heard of in the past ten years has gone in the other direction. Regards to all Iain PS. Arny, your presence on RAT, as one who holds tube audio in low regard, is something of an enigma. |
#50
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![]() Iain Churches wrote: People who have actual hands-on experience with building SET amps will confirm that there is a difference, but you need to prove it for yourself, as I am doing. Iain: What you write is likely true. However in this case you are backing a three-legged mule in a horserace by using Mr. McCoy in the same general post when you mention "People who have actual hands-on experience..." and so on. The two are mutually exclusive. Though you did leave the door open with the vagueness of the term 'people'. I have always heard the difference between tube and SS, even tube and massive, well-built SS amps. There are differences... more than a few. I have even heard a reputedly very well made Set/Single-Driver horn system. That it lacked for dynamic sources and had no perceptable bass did not detract from the fact that it produced quite beautiful music from limited source material. I post here because I have an abiding interest in tube stuff, I have just rebuilt a vintage amp and am gradually working through a vintage receiver. Eventually my home-brew will get off the breadboard and onto a chassis... eventually. But at this moment, Mr. McCoy has nothing but a loose grab-bag of miscellaneous parts, no actual built anything and a schematic that even when "final" is still fraught with error and questionable choices. It is hardly a shining example of the species, nor is Mr. McCoy hardly a shining example of a careful, thoughtful home-brewer both by manner and execution. We had a recent example of a very nice home-brew that not only was gorgeous, but surely worked, and was exquisitely well made using affordable and accessible means and methods. The creator made his choices because he like them, and not as anything but what he wanted. And certainly not as "ultra" anything. Note the difference in behavior, note the difference in performance, note the difference in result. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#51
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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![]() "Iain Churches" wrote You don't have to take Andre's word (or anyone else's word) for it Graham - try it for yourself:-) Take off your engineer's hat, put on your musician's hat, and listen to the music. People who have actual hands-on experience with building SET amps will confirm that there is a difference, but you need to prove it for yourself, as I am doing. I haven't been following this thread closely but if you mean there is a difference between SETs and other valve amps then I can add that, over the Christmas period, I revisited my various amps (valve SET/PP and SS) - by way of 'realignment and reaffirmation' and confirm that the SETs have it by a mile.... |
#52
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"Iain Churches" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. More to the point, most audiophiles long ago observed that tubed amps aren't worth the trouble or expense. Arny. I don't know about the situation in the US but here in Scandinavia your statement could not be more wrong:-( A recent survey here has shown that the top of the high-end market for music systems (not home theatre) is totally dominated by tube amplifiers. When you have some audited stats from an independent source, be sure to post them Iain. Until then, it looks like you're talking out of the back of your neck, as usual. ;-( |
#53
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: When you have some audited stats from an independent source, be sure to post them Iain. Until then, it looks like you're talking out of the back of your neck, as usual. ;-( Arny: Relax. Iain rarely makes stuff up, and in this case, he may be dead-on target. Just parse the claim: Top end of the market. Dominated by tubes. With absolute respect to those very few in the top end of any market who are there because they actually demand the best and are willing to pay for it, most anyone paying nose-bleed prices for stereo equipment are typically not overly gifted with either taste or common sense. They purchase what is in fashion at the moment, mostly because they can. It is certainly the case that tube equipment happens to be "in fashion" at this moment. My friend at the local High end ship (The Stereo Trading Outlet in Jenkintown, PA) has started to move a great deal of tube stuff lately and the trend is increasing. It would not surprise me one bit if Iain's claim is true. How long it remains true is a different question, as trends evolve. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#54
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On 15 Jan 2007 12:54:58 -0800, "Peter Wieck" wrote:
Arny Krueger wrote: When you have some audited stats from an independent source, be sure to post them Iain. Until then, it looks like you're talking out of the back of your neck, as usual. ;-( Arny: Relax. Iain rarely makes stuff up, and in this case, he may be dead-on target. Just parse the claim: Top end of the market. Dominated by tubes. With absolute respect to those very few in the top end of any market who are there because they actually demand the best and are willing to pay for it, most anyone paying nose-bleed prices for stereo equipment are typically not overly gifted with either taste or common sense. They purchase what is in fashion at the moment, mostly because they can. It is certainly the case that tube equipment happens to be "in fashion" at this moment. My friend at the local High end ship (The Stereo Trading Outlet in Jenkintown, PA) has started to move a great deal of tube stuff lately and the trend is increasing. It would not surprise me one bit if Iain's claim is true. How long it remains true is a different question, as trends evolve. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA It is no more than a begged question. If you choose to define the top end of the market as that using tubes, then the top end will be dominated by tubes. On the other had if, like anyone sensible, you define the top end of the market as that with the most accurate systems, there won't be a tube in sight. So just a standard logical fallacy (or trick if you are being critical) in operation. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#55
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: It is no more than a begged question. If you choose to define the top end of the market as that using tubes, then the top end will be dominated by tubes. On the other had if, like anyone sensible, you define the top end of the market as that with the most accurate systems, there won't be a tube in sight. So just a standard logical fallacy (or trick if you are being critical) in operation. I was defining "Top End" solely based on cost. I expect that Iain was as well. Those who choose what they want based on knowledge and the expectation of certain and sure results will choose based on those requirements, not on cost. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#56
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On 15 Jan 2007 13:38:41 -0800, "Peter Wieck" wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: It is no more than a begged question. If you choose to define the top end of the market as that using tubes, then the top end will be dominated by tubes. On the other had if, like anyone sensible, you define the top end of the market as that with the most accurate systems, there won't be a tube in sight. So just a standard logical fallacy (or trick if you are being critical) in operation. I was defining "Top End" solely based on cost. I expect that Iain was as well. Those who choose what they want based on knowledge and the expectation of certain and sure results will choose based on those requirements, not on cost. Defining on cost has exactly the result I was describing. There is nothing in a solid state high end amp that would force cost up to the levels demanded by anything with tubes and a sensible amount of power - the sheer physical mass simply isn't there. So defining by cost is essentially the same as defining by tube content. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#58
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: Defining on cost has exactly the result I was describing. There is nothing in a solid state high end amp that would force cost up to the levels demanded by anything with tubes and a sensible amount of power - the sheer physical mass simply isn't there. So defining by cost is essentially the same as defining by tube content. Have you priced some of the stuff out there lately. There is not much to choose between tube and SS in prices. These guys charge what they charge because they can. In the immortal words of W.C. Fields (or Edward Albee if you are of that persuasion): Never give a sucker an even break. As in most things, 'fashion' drives the very top end of the industry. Once that is understood, the rest follows. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#59
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On 14 Jan 2007 23:51:59 -0800, "Andre Jute" wrote:
wrote: Just one question - why the battery? This is the circuit under discussion: http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...trafi-crct.jpg All components have sonic signature. Some have very little, or are difficult to use for sound shaping. There is absolutely no point in building an amp this expensive unless for some purpose beyond the bragging rights of "I have Western Electric 300Bs in my amp, which of course I built myself." A good purpose is to take charge of the quality of your sound, rather than leave it in the hands of some zero-culture, long-since deaf, totally uncivilized, supercilious, smug silicon slime, of which we can see ample samples on these conferences. (There are also some very cultured and agreeable silicon designers but they are successful and don't need my help.) The WE417A driver tube was chosen for its particular signature. I had already designed a much more precise reference SE300B amp for Western Electric tubes with two 6SN7 stages, of which the most popular version is he http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T44bis-'Populaire'-crct.jpg But in the T39 I was stepping back, building an amp for hedonists, not soulless technicians. The 417A is very suitable for hedonists, very linear (but not as linear as a 6SN7), quite a bit warmer in the manner of the double digit veteran directly heated triodes but much more widely available. Count what besides the 417A is in that circuit. The attenuator is a DACT, built by robots on Swiss goldplated switches with SMD resistors: zero signature, as it should be. I have no belief in anything more than marginal soundshaping with resistors; Kiwame are slightly but perceptibly warmer than the common Beyschlagg I also like, and the rest leave me indifferent to the difference between them, if any; I believe in overspeccing my resistors to run them cool and so avoid various kinds of resistor noise which can be important in small signal circuits. So that leaves the tube itself, whose sound we can shape by the value of the resistor in the plate circuit and whatever we decide to put in the cathode circuit. Taking the plate circuit first, we can lower the resistor value and thereby make the sound dirtier at the volume extremes, which to the uninitiated might sound like more bass (analogous to what you hear on boomboxes on the street or from little passing hatchbacks owned by wannabe gangsta but of course not degraded quite that far). That isn't quite my style, so I load the plate up to the maximum I can within the available power supply, thereby linearizing the response. I should explain that my style is first to extract the maximum silence that good engineering allows, which from tubes is much more impressive than you might imagine when you read the silicon slime who hang out here to tell us how wrong we are because they can't get any other employment. After that I back off to a suitable level of hedonism. This isn't quite euphonious distortion, it is more like a sense of balance and perspective, and an understanding of psychoacoustics (I'm by training an economist and psychologist). At this point we can then choose from four ways to implement a cathode circuit. One, by constant current sink, I dismiss immediately as too complicated for an amp announced as KISS (keep it simple, stupid); in my next project I shall return to CCS because there their complication is the least of the evils. That leaves three ways of doing it: a resistor alone, a resistor bypassed by a cap, and battery bias. Of these, the bypassed resistor is my instinctive fave. It is simple, it is selfadjusting, and if you spend the time and the money on development and components, you will eventually choose the right capacitor; I have long since done my homework and know what I will use. Open another circuit: http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/t...17acircuit.jpg This is a complete amp built only from the first stage of the T39 (in fact it was made by removing the 300B from a T39). It should now become clear to you that if I substitute the battery with a resistor and a cap), the cap becomes the sole determinant of the sonic quality of the stage. With so little in the circuit, the cap really looms large. An unbypassed resistor has feedback which changes the sound adversely by making it harder, more crystalline and by tilting the response towards the bass when in fact I want to tilt the 417A's "natural" tendency the other way -- I just want a slightly warm amp, not a hot, gushy amp. That leaves a battery, which, while not a soundshaping element under my control (in that there is only one choice of operating conditions for a 417A with battery bias if you already decided the plate voltage), is at least perfectly neutral. The battery also has a tendency to stabilize everything around it which is a good thing as I have already paid a heavy price in efficiency for ballasts and other devices to stablilize important electrical points and any"free" margin is welcome. So, by a process of elimination, I am left only with the battery. This thought process is described in http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/T...mp%20INDEX.htm If you study the T68bis "Minus Zero" circuit even cursorily, you will immediately see that the other big sonic influence, besides a putative, potential, possible cathode bypass cap, is the power supply. But that is fully developed and fixed in a desirable sonic already, and is anyway a large loose cannon on deck if you lose control of it, so you don't want to mess with success if instead you can do the job by working with one or at most two cathode circuit components, which brings us back to the battery decision, which by its impedance in turn makes any remaining solecism of the power supply a moot point. All roads lead to Rome. In the T68bis you can see how all currents must pass through that battery. It is the very dream of every control freak, though the wannabe control freaks on RAT and UKRA lack the subtlety to understand what is happening. OK 2 questions... why the 4 paralleled input resistors? Noise? The WE417A has wonderful sonics once the designer grasps how to handle it; in the hands of the usual pretenders it quickly turns to expensive noise because nobody told them it is a radio frequency tube. Almost all tubes are, of course, but the 417A is especially efficient in the RF. It has four grid pins which can pick up radio rubbish, so each one requires a grid stopper and the signal can be put in to any of them, though one is better than the others by far for simple reasons of physics that may be determined by observation. HTH. If this is more information than you wanted, next time don't ask such a(n only apparently) simple question! Not too much at all - it was a great read! ( I din't have time yet to follow the links but I will.) I also build amps, have been since the 60s ( hence the moniker) and noise is very important to me, since lots of recordings I have are very quiet (read weak) and amp noise can be overwhelming. My choice for power supply is hefty sand diodes and hundreds of µf of capacity... I believe it eliminates the PS from the equations. I also spider wire everything, no series de-coupling for me... ( except if you count the multi-cap distribution resistors!.) OK I lied... I also float the caps from the chassis, I like to have the final word in where the earth point is... One thing - did you put a scope to the battery? Is there any signal visible on it or is it a good ground? Thanks |
#60
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On Mon, 15 Jan 2007 08:27:07 +0000, Eeyore
wrote: The answer is easily derived from basic principles, or even from a Google search on this newsgroup. It ain't rocket surgery. I just posted my thoughts on the matter. How about yours ? A voltage gradient across the cathode is similar to a geometric gradient in cathode-grid spacing, or alternatively to a variable grid winding pitch. Neither are exact, but give the flavor. The voltage gradient causes distortion by increasing the exponent in the Child's approximation. IIRC this may have been discussed in threads about ultrasonic heating of filamentary valves. But maybe not. All good fortune, Chris Hornbeck "History consists of truths which in the end turn into lies, while myth consists of lies which finally turn into truths." - Jean Cocteau |
#61
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#62
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![]() "Jon Yaeger" wrote in message ... There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. If the elusive, subjective concept of "sonically pleasing" applies to "upper end", then there would certainly be a place for tube gear. Jon It does. There is. Iain |
#63
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On 15 Jan 2007 12:54:58 -0800, "Peter Wieck" wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: When you have some audited stats from an independent source, be sure to post them Iain. Until then, it looks like you're talking out of the back of your neck, as usual. ;-( Arny: Relax. Iain rarely makes stuff up, and in this case, he may be dead-on target. Just parse the claim: Top end of the market. Dominated by tubes. With absolute respect to those very few in the top end of any market who are there because they actually demand the best and are willing to pay for it, most anyone paying nose-bleed prices for stereo equipment are typically not overly gifted with either taste or common sense. They purchase what is in fashion at the moment, mostly because they can. It is certainly the case that tube equipment happens to be "in fashion" at this moment. My friend at the local High end ship (The Stereo Trading Outlet in Jenkintown, PA) has started to move a great deal of tube stuff lately and the trend is increasing. It would not surprise me one bit if Iain's claim is true. How long it remains true is a different question, as trends evolve. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA It is no more than a begged question. If you choose to define the top end of the market as that using tubes, then the top end will be dominated by tubes. On the other had if, like anyone sensible, you define the top end of the market as that with the most accurate systems, there won't be a tube in sight. So just a standard logical fallacy (or trick if you are being critical) in operation. d Another thing to bear in mind is whether whatever the 'top end of the market' finds to be flavour of the month is any valid indicator that one should pay attention to when considering such products' merits. Graham |
#64
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![]() Jon Yaeger wrote: There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. By whose criteria ? Graham |
#65
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![]() Chris Hornbeck wrote: Eeyore wrote: The answer is easily derived from basic principles, or even from a Google search on this newsgroup. It ain't rocket surgery. I just posted my thoughts on the matter. How about yours ? A voltage gradient across the cathode is similar to a geometric gradient in cathode-grid spacing, or alternatively to a variable grid winding pitch. That's what I concluded too. Like a variable mu tube IIRC. Neither are exact, but give the flavor. The voltage gradient causes distortion by increasing the exponent in the Child's approximation. Yes. IIRC this may have been discussed in threads about ultrasonic heating of filamentary valves. But maybe not. I hadn't heard that one. In any event, an audible difference between DC and AC heating of DHTs indicates to me that with AC there must be some signal modulation at 2 x line frequency, like a tiny tremolo effect perhaps. Graham |
#66
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In article ,
Eeyore wrote: You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Absence of any answer noted. Is that a polite version of bull****? -- *Oh, what a tangled website we weave when first we practice * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#67
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: You build tube amps to have the tone quality under your own control. Most audiophiles arrived there by observing that silicon amps do not faithfully reproduce the experience of the concert hall. Absence of any answer noted. Is that a polite version of bull****? It was actually an indication that Joot failed to answer my question in fact, posting instead some his usual rambling nonsense. That he also writes bull**** is incidental to that point. Graham |
#68
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.tech
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![]() Andrew Jute McCoy blathered: BTW, if you were smart, instead of crossing Robert Morein, you would have recruited him. He's a holy fool and anyone who can harness the force of such can be rich. I know, I worked in advertising. You're too thick and slow for your own good, McCarty. You'll be no loss to the gene pool. Always ready to advise exploitation. Somehow that is exactly in your character. Morein may be a fool, he may even be "holy" as you suggest as he certainly tilts at many windmills and has the general attitude of the obsessed. All-and-at-the-same-time, he is at least human. A characteristic that you lack to any discernable degree. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#69
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.tech
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"Soundhaspriority" wrote in message
"Andre Jute" wrote in message ps.com... Brian McCarty, pretending to be Robert Morein, wrote: In article , "Andre Jute" wrote: [snip] BTW, if you were smart, instead of crossing Robert Morein, you would have recruited him. He's a holy fool and anyone who can harness the force of such can be rich. Andre, do elaborate ![]() ![]() ![]() Obviously Robert, you're a true believer in any number of audio myths. |
#70
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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"Eeyore" wrote in
message Chris Hornbeck wrote: Eeyore wrote: The answer is easily derived from basic principles, or even from a Google search on this newsgroup. It ain't rocket surgery. I just posted my thoughts on the matter. How about yours ? A voltage gradient across the cathode is similar to a geometric gradient in cathode-grid spacing, or alternatively to a variable grid winding pitch. That's what I concluded too. Like a variable mu tube IIRC. Neither are exact, but give the flavor. The voltage gradient causes distortion by increasing the exponent in the Child's approximation. Yes. IIRC this may have been discussed in threads about ultrasonic heating of filamentary valves. But maybe not. I hadn't heard that one. In any event, an audible difference between DC and AC heating of DHTs indicates to me that with AC there must be some signal modulation at 2 x line frequency, like a tiny tremolo effect perhaps. How can this sonic effect be perceived as improved realism? |
#71
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
ups.com Relax. Iain rarely makes stuff up, Kinda. He's good at mis-perceiving reality. and in this case, he may be dead-on target. Just parse the claim: Top end of the market. Dominated by tubes. With absolute respect to those very few in the top end of any market who are there because they actually demand the best and are willing to pay for it, most anyone paying nose-bleed prices for stereo equipment are typically not overly gifted with either taste or common sense. They purchase what is in fashion at the moment, mostly because they can. If you haven't noticed, I live in Grosse Pointe, Michigan. Plenty of that sort of thing going on, only not so much with audio gear. We've got lots of very boatable fresh water nearby, if you catch my drift. It is certainly the case that tube equipment happens to be "in fashion" at this moment. This may be true in certain limited areas, but it is not a global truth. My friend at the local High end ship (The Stereo Trading Outlet in Jenkintown, PA) has started to move a great deal of tube stuff lately and the trend is increasing. Isolated anecdote? It would not surprise me one bit if Iain's claim is true. Given his many misperceptions in the past, it might just as easily be false. How long it remains true is a different question, as trends evolve. That it is true at all, remains questionable. |
#72
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Don Pearce" wrote in message
It is no more than a begged question. If you choose to define the top end of the market as that using tubes, then the top end will be dominated by tubes. Now that is more characteristic of Iain's sort of thinking. On the other had if, like anyone sensible, you define the top end of the market as that with the most accurate systems, there won't be a tube in sight. Roughly true. Using tubes isn't absolutely detrimental to sonic accuracy, just debilitating. So just a standard logical fallacy (or trick if you are being critical) in operation. Given my experience with Iain, the more likely situation. |
#73
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
oups.com I was defining "Top End" solely based on cost. In fact, an incomplete way to define "Top end". Things like reputation and who else owns the products, also relate. I expect that Iain was as well. Nahh, Iain defines "Top End" in a more self-centered way. Those who choose what they want based on knowledge and the expectation of certain and sure results will choose based on those requirements, not on cost. Agreed. |
#74
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
ups.com Have you priced some of the stuff out there lately. That only shows the offering prices, not the prices that are actually paid. Correct me if I'm wrong, but actual selling prices usually undershoot asking prices by just a wee little bit? There is not much to choose between tube and SS in prices. I'm not sure about that, if we are talking asking prices. I know about fractional million $$$ tubed amps (e.g. Wavac), I may be speaking in ignorance, but I know of no SS amps in the same range. These guys charge what they charge because they can. In the immortal words of W.C. Fields (or Edward Albee if you are of that persuasion): Never give a sucker an even break. E.g. true believers like Iain. As in most things, 'fashion' drives the very top end of the industry. Once that is understood, the rest follows. IME fashion relates to more than just prices. |
#75
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Jon Yaeger" wrote in message
There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. Prove it. You're only deifiying your tastes and prejudices. If the elusive, subjective concept of "sonically pleasing" applies to "upper end", then there would certainly be a place for tube gear. Beyond a certain price point, products tend to be less practical. Their weirdness and peculiarities become part of their charm. |
#76
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Eeyore" wrote in
message Jon Yaeger wrote: There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. By whose criteria ? The criteria of those who lack absolute references. |
#77
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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![]() Eeyore wrote: There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. By whose criteria ? Keeerist, Graham! Get a grip! Not everything is measurable. And _many_ things are a matter of taste and preference, not fact and measurement. I cannot abide sweet-potatoes or pudding in any form. Others dote on either or both. At any volume, blind-folded and with a head-cold, I can distinguish between several brands of 12AX7 & clone tubes. Do I think one is necessarily 'better" than the other? Not hardly. Would they measure differently, I doubt it. I find tube sound *different* from SS sound. There are times when I prefer one over the other, and there are times when I could care less. I have access to both, and within each several choices. Each appeals in its own way. However EACH of them does great credit to the music I choose to play. My wife, on the other hand, has a distinctly favorite combination and could care less about the rest of it. That favorite is 100% solid-state, but uses our commonly preferred speakers. I believe that it has much to do with the simplicity of that system vs. the others. She has only to deal with two switches: On/Off/Volume & Source. Comes to it, I believe that my choice of speakers has far more to do with what things 'sound like' than my choice of amplification. Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA |
#78
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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"Peter Wieck" wrote in message
ups.com Not everything is measurable. But everything that is audible is readily measurable. IOW, in a discussion of audio, everything is measuable. And _many_ things are a matter of taste and preference, not fact and measurement. Taste and preference are also measurable. Perhaps not as well as some would like. Furthermore, there are ways to isolate many perceptions from preconceived notions. I cannot abide sweet-potatoes or pudding in any form. The diffrences between foods you like and foods you don't like are generally measurable. Others dote on either or both. Guilty as charged! ;-) At any volume, blind-folded and with a head-cold, I can distinguish between several brands of 12AX7 & clone tubes. Horsefeathers. Do I think one is necessarily 'better" than the other? Not hardly. I think you've not done enough blind listening tests to speak as you do. Would they measure differently, I doubt it. Horsefeathers. Tubes measure differently all day long. Anybody with adequate experience with a comprehensive tube tester knows that. I find tube sound *different* from SS sound. That may or not be true. Depends which SS and which tubes. There are times when I prefer one over the other, and there are times when I could care less. Guilty as charged. ;-) I have access to both, and within each several choices. Each appeals in its own way. However EACH of them does great credit to the music I choose to play. IME some does, some doesn't. My wife, on the other hand, has a distinctly favorite combination and could care less about the rest of it. That favorite is 100% solid-state, but uses our commonly preferred speakers. I believe that it has much to do with the simplicity of that system vs. the others. She has only to deal with two switches: On/Off/Volume & Source. Women seem to have this practical streak... ;-) Of course there's always Jenn over in RAO. A rare exception does not disprove the rule. Comes to it, I believe that my choice of speakers has far more to do with what things 'sound like' than my choice of amplification. That makes sense. The reasons are measurable, BTW. |
#79
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: "Eeyore" wrote in Chris Hornbeck wrote: Eeyore wrote: The answer is easily derived from basic principles, or even from a Google search on this newsgroup. It ain't rocket surgery. I just posted my thoughts on the matter. How about yours ? A voltage gradient across the cathode is similar to a geometric gradient in cathode-grid spacing, or alternatively to a variable grid winding pitch. That's what I concluded too. Like a variable mu tube IIRC. Neither are exact, but give the flavor. The voltage gradient causes distortion by increasing the exponent in the Child's approximation. Yes. IIRC this may have been discussed in threads about ultrasonic heating of filamentary valves. But maybe not. I hadn't heard that one. In any event, an audible difference between DC and AC heating of DHTs indicates to me that with AC there must be some signal modulation at 2 x line frequency, like a tiny tremolo effect perhaps. How can this sonic effect be perceived as improved realism? It wouldn't be of course but SETs aren't about realism anyway. Graham |
#80
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes,uk.rec.audio
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![]() Peter Wieck wrote: Eeyore wrote: There are a lot of SS systems that are "accurate" from a THD & IM perspective but are not sonically pleasing. By whose criteria ? Keeerist, Graham! Get a grip! Not everything is measurable. No ? My point is that Jon made a blanket statement that has no basis in fact as far as I can see. Hence I asked for some elaboration. Graham |
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