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#1
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#2
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile I don't think it's trivial at all. It does, however, tend to be canonical, which means the devil is in the details, rather than a new overarching concept which probably does not exist. It might be interesting to enumerate the design concepts for solid state amplifiers which have occurred. I would guess the number to be less than twenty, in two groups: 1. Device physics 2. Circuit topology From the examples I've seen, written about primarily in Stereophile -- though the Acoustat was covered in "Audio", it would seem that the result is limited more by the design budget than anything else. The more components, as in active constant current sources, higher quality parts, stiffer supplies, etc., one can throw at it, the better the result. The end game example of this is that Australian amp (name, please?) that has far lower levels of distortion than anything else. That amplifier is an important example, because it tends to negate the worth of the "boutique designs" that emphasize some particular parameter at the expense of others. That is another area that I've never found real happiness with, in comparison to amplifiers engineered for general goodness. Oddly, although amplifier design has become mature, it does not appear to me that specification and testing has. The scientist in me says it all has to reduce to numbers, yet it does not, which means that the numbers are obtained by test procedures that fail to characterize amplifier behavior. Someone ought to work on this. |
#3
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In article ,
Robert Morein wrote: supplies, etc., one can throw at it, the better the result. The end game example of this is that Australian amp (name, please?) that has far lower levels of distortion than anything else. Lower levels of distortion is not the end game. Stability into infinitely varying loads, is. Oddly, although amplifier design has become mature, it does not appear to me that specification and testing has. The scientist in me says it all has to reduce to numbers, yet it does not, which means that the numbers are obtained by test procedures that fail to characterize amplifier behavior. Someone ought to work on this. Audio amplifier design is fascinating, and it's what drew me to rao at first. Early discussions on Class A vs A/AB design, and 300B tube designs were a great education for me. Of course, then, those with knowledge left, leaving the wreckage you see. It's great to see interest in improving audio design. Joe |
#4
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"Joe Duffy" wrote in message
Of course, then, those with knowledge left, leaving the wreckage you see. Not everybody with knowledge left. It's great to see interest in improving audio design. The most significant gains are needed elsewhere. Amp technology isn't trivial, but it is pretty well cut-and-dried. There's not much left to do but to make them smaller/cheaper/lighter/more efficient. |
#5
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In article ,
Arny Krueger wrote: The most significant gains are needed elsewhere. Amp technology isn't I agree that speakers yield the most improvement, however amplifiers are more interesting. Joe |
#6
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The "perfect amp" I cited is Halcro.
If science is to be believed, there can be no competitor to this company's product. |
#7
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
The "perfect amp" I cited is Halcro. If science is to be believed, there can be no competitor to this company's product. If science is to believed, Halcro levels of technical perfection are an interesting technical exercise and little else. |
#8
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Robert Morein" wrote in message The "perfect amp" I cited is Halcro. If science is to be believed, there can be no competitor to this company's product. If science is to believed, Halcro levels of technical perfection are an interesting technical exercise and little else. I distinguish between soft science, which encompasses psychology, perception, and certain aspects of biology, and hard science, such as physics and molecular biology. Because soft science relies so much on observation, without any overarching theory to back it up, it is prone to error and reversal. For example, for a hundred years, it was believed that neuronal replacement did not occur in the adult mammalian brain. Within the past three years, this has become known to be completely false. And the ear is an extension of the nervous system. Your statement above may be correct, or it may not, but there is no good science to back it up. All there is are isolated studies, flawed or not, which may be used to incorrectly extrapolate the conclusion that perfection at the level of a Halcro is irrelevant. Bad scientist alert STANDS!!! |
#9
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Robert Morein" wrote in message The "perfect amp" I cited is Halcro. If science is to be believed, there can be no competitor to this company's product. If science is to believed, Halcro levels of technical perfection are an interesting technical exercise and little else. I distinguish between soft science, which encompasses psychology, perception, and certain aspects of biology, and hard science, such as physics and molecular biology. I think most people do. But just because there's a distinction in our minds doesn't mean that the soft sciences are 100% bad which you later claim. Furthermore, you hedged your bets by putting a undefined boundary line out someplace in the science of biology. So you admit that its not clear where this dividing line is. Because soft science relies so much on observation, without any overarching theory to back it up, it is prone to error and reversal. For example, for a hundred years, it was believed that neuronal replacement did not occur in the adult mammalian brain. Within the past three years, this has become known to be completely false. And the ear is an extension of the nervous system. So what? This paper set forth a "threshold of hearing": H. Fletcher and W. A. Munson, "Loudness, its definition, measurement and calculation," Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 5, pp. 82--108, Oct. 1933. I think that the last paper investigating the same property of the ears I've seen was dated some time in early 2002. It basically confirmed the same results. Yet delusional golden ear audiophiles such as yourself Morein, like to disregard the idea that the human ear has known, finite sensitivity limits that are actually quite high by modern technical standards. Interestingly the way some people interpreted the F-M results was found to be wildly optimistic by a number of scientists about 10 years ago, guys like Zwicker and Fastl. Bottom line, in actual use the ear often disregards far higher levels of sound than might be predicted by a naive reading of F-M. Did Z-W know what they are talking about? A whole segment of the audio industry based on "Perceptual Coding" is built on the scientific findings they enlightened us about. The net of "Perceptual Coding" is that something like 90% or more distortion (in the sense of loss of information) is acceptable to the ear, if you pick the right 90% to distort. Your statement above may be correct, or it may not, but there is no good science to back it up. There's tons of good science and empirical evidence that backs it up. If you want to point to some minor point about the mammalian brain as proof that none of the "soft sciences" are any good, that's up to you. But that isn't exactly very good logic, is it? All there is are isolated studies, flawed or not, which may be used to incorrectly extrapolate the conclusion that perfection at the level of a Halcro is irrelevant. Consummate ignorance of the relevant science is noted. Bad scientist alert STANDS!!! You just indicted yourself as a bad scientist again, Morein. Thanks! Obsess over the Halcro if you want to Morein, it's your money, your life. Just don't try to use egregiously bad logic like this and your ignorance of what's known about the sensitivity of the human ear to justify your obsessions and mislead others. |
#10
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Robert Morein wrote:
Because soft science relies so much on observation, without any overarching theory to back it up, it is prone to error and reversal. For example, for a hundred years, it was believed that neuronal replacement did not occur in the adult mammalian brain. Within the past three years, this has become known to be completely false. And the ear is an extension of the nervous system. Actually, people knew this over a decade ago - by witnessing such things as people who had half of their brain missing and seeing it re-wire itself into the non-dead portions. Of course, like most things in life, widespread acceptance takes about a decade or two to happen. |
#11
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![]() "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... Oddly, although amplifier design has become mature, it does not appear to me that specification and testing has. The scientist in me says it all has to reduce to numbers, yet it does not... Actually it does, but we've simply failed to create devices that accurately measure the attributes we (audiophiles) are interested in. |
#12
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"jeffc" wrote in message
m "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... Oddly, although amplifier design has become mature, it does not appear to me that specification and testing has. The scientist in me says it all has to reduce to numbers, yet it does not... Actually it does, but we've simply failed to create devices that accurately measure the attributes we (audiophiles) are interested in. Most such attributes being non-sonic. That's a problem with the soft science of marketing, not the hard science of measurement of audio parameters. |
#13
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." One of the better online discussions of audio power amp design is posted at http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/ampins/dipa/dipa.htm . Not trivial, but also no longer any kind of big secret for people who do their homework. There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. However, for $5 or $10 you can buy one-up, a chip that delivers very usable amounts of power with very little or no audible distortion and just a few added parts. However, turning this chip into a competitive product is still a goodly amount of work. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Any project that involves designing and/or building and selling a competitive product is challenging. Even the experts fail at it, every once in a while. |
#14
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In article ,
John Atkinson wrote: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise Non-trivial! Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Indeed, so. Joe |
#16
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(Audio Guy) wrote in message
... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#17
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In article ,
(John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote in message ... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. My point is that relative to other areas of EE, audio IS trivial. As well as mundane and much less lucrative. I mean, come on, it just doesn't compare to to something like designing ICs at the sub-micron level, or optical transmission at a 10 Gbit/sec rate. |
#18
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![]() "Audio Guy" wrote in message ... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote in message ... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. My point is that relative to other areas of EE, audio IS trivial. As well as mundane and much less lucrative. I mean, come on, it just doesn't compare to to something like designing ICs at the sub-micron level, or optical transmission at a 10 Gbit/sec rate. The latest EE Times has an article, "40 gHz and Beyond" 40 gHz! Of all the centuries, this is the most unlike any other. I've been told I look about 27 years old, yet I remember futzing with 6BA6's and other thermionic devices. When I was a child, I took a Coke-bottle tube out of the back of the TV and held it in my hand, much to the consternation of my baby sitter. Then I remember staring at a 2764 under a Nikon binocular microscope, and marveled at the tiny array. With a 27C512, you can't see the array! Now IC lithography is going beyond the realm of visible light, into UV and soft X-ray. Hell, when I was a physics grad student, we used to believe that the two-slit diffraction experiment was explained by Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle. My dear qmech teacher, Sigurd Larsen, showed us that all "Hidden Variables Theories" had inherent contradictions. Turned out VonNeumann's proof was wrong! Next up: Spintronics, on the Road to 100 gHz Computing! |
#19
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"Audio Guy" wrote in message
My point is that relative to other areas of EE, audio IS trivial. Well certainly, most legacy audio is very cut-and-dried. Other than making high quality audio smaller/lighter/cheaper there isn't a lot of life left in the old girl. Audio could be more interesting and profitable, but so much of its real and intangible capital has been squandered on snake oil. Audio has been largely a derivative art for at least 20-30 years. As well as mundane and much less lucrative. Bingo, and one reason why I've never looked for a full-time job in audio since I was 15. I have some friends who did with varied success, but many of them either fell off the gravy train or are glad they are coming up on retirement. I mean, come on, it just doesn't compare to to something like designing ICs at the sub-micron level, or optical transmission at a 10 Gbit/sec rate. There are a few ways to make the big bucks in audio and not soil oneself with snake oil, but they are few and far between. |
#20
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... (Audio Guy) wrote in message ... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile Many words slip into a discourse through inadvertent prejudice or association, rather than intended meaning. I think what Audioguy meant to say is that audio amplification is regarded as trivial not because it is, but because it is bereft of the prestige that comes with working in a field with actively advancing fundamentals. For example, Kalman filtering is no less important now than in the early 1960's, yet only the specialists who actually insert these very canonical algorithms into microcontrollers pay any attention. Examples of recent, really remarkable advances which incorporate elements of circuit theory are high speed serial bus transducers, such as RAMBUS or USB flash A/D the neodymium lightwave amplfier Sun's capacitive chip interface and a little bit earlier: the gyrator By contrast, designing and building an audio amplifier is somewhat like cutting a diamond. It has become an almost timeless skill. But I say to you, John, that nobody has come up with a reasonable set of figures of merit. I still can't look at a set of your graphs and predict how an amp will sound. That's a disconnect. |
#21
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
But I say to you, John, that nobody has come up with a reasonable set of figures of merit. Admittedly he hasn't dumbed his tech reports down enough to address the typical nontechnical audiophile. However, these guys are generally snowed by the subjectivist poetry and song-and-dance. I still can't look at a set of your graphs and predict how an amp will sound. Confession of highly ability to make abstraction relate to the real world noted. John's charts and graphs could be used to sift the sonically transparent amps from the others. For the ones that aren't transparent, a fairly close-sounding model could be constructed from his reports. What more does it take? That's a disconnect. Only for people who aren't up-to-date about science and audio and don't want to bother to learn. |
#22
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
... I think what Audioguy meant to say is that audio amplification is regarded as trivial not because it is, but because it is bereft of the prestige that comes with working in a field with actively advancing fundamentals. If so, then I don't disagree. I say to you, John, that nobody has come up with a reasonable set of figures of merit. I still can't look at a set of your graphs and predict how an amp will sound. That's a disconnect. Unfortunately yes. But two excellent papers by Earl Geddes and his wife, presented at the recent AES Convention, show a way forward, by looking at how the spuriae produced by the "bent" transfer function of a typical amplifier can be examined using a masking model representing human perception. Their provisional results show excellent correlation between the metric for a given amplifier and the audibility of its spuriae. This work is not at the stage where someone could plug measured results into a spreadsheet and out pops a "good" "moderate" "bad" judgment, but eventually something like that will be possible. Of course, a human reviewer will still be needed to produce what Tom Nosuaine calls the "audio poetry." :-) John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#23
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#24
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... I think what Audioguy meant to say is that audio amplification is regarded as trivial not because it is, but because it is bereft of the prestige that comes with working in a field with actively advancing fundamentals. If so, then I don't disagree. I say to you, John, that nobody has come up with a reasonable set of figures of merit. I still can't look at a set of your graphs and predict how an amp will sound. That's a disconnect. Unfortunately yes. But two excellent papers by Earl Geddes and his wife, presented at the recent AES Convention, show a way forward, by looking at how the spuriae produced by the "bent" transfer function of a typical amplifier can be examined using a masking model representing human perception. Their provisional results show excellent correlation between the metric for a given amplifier and the audibility of its spuriae. That sounds very promising. There may yet be room for audio poetry, however. If I may liken audio to a data stream with "features", the mere audibility of a feature "discrepancy" may not correlate with the emotional importance to the listener. The frequency of the "feature", and thus the "discrepancy", also depends upon the musical material. Treble grain may be barely audible, and comprise an insignificant portion of the power spectrum, yet be as irritating as chalk on a blackboard. And loose, tubby bass may be considered a benefit to some. The most consistent thing about amplifiers I have noticed is my personal need to match the amplifier to the speaker. Bright amps work well with soft domes, while softer, ie., MOSFET amps, work better for me with hard domes. The right wine for the meal. But I have had in the back of my mind using a Hafler type bridge to get the difference signal and look at the spectra. I was largely dissuaded by the thought that this was a solution that nobody wanted. as many members of this group might state. This work is not at the stage where someone could plug measured results into a spreadsheet and out pops a "good" "moderate" "bad" judgment, but eventually something like that will be possible. Of course, a human reviewer will still be needed to produce what Tom Nosuaine calls the "audio poetry." :-) John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#26
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om Unfortunately yes. But two excellent papers by Earl Geddes and his wife, presented at the recent AES Convention, show a way forward, by looking at how the spuriae produced by the "bent" transfer function of a typical amplifier can be examined using a masking model representing human perception. Their provisional results show excellent correlation between the metric for a given amplifier and the audibility of its spuriae. Geddes' specialty is loudspeaker design and evaluation. Therefore he's concerned with relatively high levels of distortion by the standards of modern audio power amplifiers. |
#27
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... (Audio Guy) wrote in message ... In article , (John Atkinson) writes: (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile Certainly more than half of the requirements you placed on your amplifier design detailed in your first reply to this header disappear if the designer knows the characteristics of the source and load ahead of time. It is for this reason that I forever wonder at how few speakers come with their own amplifier--at least in the home hi-fi industry. Norm Strong |
#28
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"normanstrong" wrote in message
news:lmVlb.3955$mZ5.23026@attbi_s54... Certainly more than half of the requirements you placed on your amplifier design detailed in your first reply to this header disappear if the designer knows the characteristics of the source and load ahead of time. It is for this reason that I forever wonder at how few speakers come with their own amplifier--at least in the home hi-fi industry. Hi Norm, I believe that the apparent restriction of customer choice that this represents is a major impediment to successful marketing of an active speaker. Even if the customer buys exactly the amplifier that the speaker designer feels works best with his loudspeaker, and would therefore be the one that could be supplied in an integrated package, it appears to be important to customers to have the widest amplifier choice available. Probably only Meridian has made much headway in the audiophile market selling integrated loudspeaker/amplifier packages. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile PS: Your letter on the purported advantages of hi-rez audio media appears in the ne (November) issue of Stereophile. |
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![]() "Nousaine" wrote in message ... "normanstrong" wrote: ...snips..... "John Atkinson" wrote in message I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) I don't know if Mr Atkinson is missing anything. But I wonder exactly how it is that with the exception of high-ouput impedance amplifiers that exactly NO ONE hasd ever shown in a reasonably well bias-controlled experiment (including Mr Atkinson's; indeed his personally conducted large trial experiments showed that even with high-output impedance amplifiers there was no sonic difference) that modern amplfiers have any sound of their own. Sure, take my words out of context. You left out the previous part that qualifies them: "Audiophiles don't realize that audio is an extremely small part of electrical engineering and that very, very few schools even teach courses in the subject. It isn't where the money is, nor is it where the interest is for EE students. EEs like to make ICs or design computers or work in motor control or design antennas or work in telecom." My apologies "audioguy" but I don't see how this paragraph changes the meaning of the words you wrote about audio amplifier design. It doesn't matter _ why_ electronic engineers feel audio is a "trivial" application, only that they do, and that is what I was addressing. Note that I feel that audio amplifier design is far from trivial. If you look at the list of attributes I listed for an ideal audio amplifier, I can think of almost none, of all the designs I have tested for Stereophile, that achieve that level of performance. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile OK; which ones that you recommend have been shown to sound different with a bias controlled listening test? Certainly more than half of the requirements you placed on your amplifier design detailed in your first reply to this header disappear if the designer knows the characteristics of the source and load ahead of time. It is for this reason that I forever wonder at how few speakers come with their own amplifier--at least in the home hi-fi industry. Norm Strong Actually the best-performing speaker I've tested DO come with their own amplifiers and application specific EQ. I wonder what Mr Atkinson's experience may be in this regard. What speaker do you refer to? |
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(John Atkinson) wrote in message . com...
(Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) I agree that designing a state of the art audio amplifier is not trivial, for the reasons you stated above. Designing an RF amplifier is more challenging than designing a audio power amplifier. For example, a typical CATV RF amplifier would be 40 MHz - 1 GHz, and have 18 to 33 dB gain. Its' basic layout is very similar to an audio power amplifier. The CATV amp will have: a couple push-pull stages of bipolar transistors, a requirement for flat response, and for very low second and third order distortion. I don't think you would be suprised to hear that getting an amplifier flat out to 1 GHz is more difficult than get an amplifier flat out to 20 kHz. In addition, CATV amplifiers are cascaded, (sometimes up to 50 amps in cascade). The sum total of the flatness of the cascade is typically better than 2 dB. That works out to 1/25 dB flatness per amplifier. The visability of noise and distortion on video, are roughly the same as the audibilty of noise and distortion for audio. But because noise and distortion add in a cascade, the distortion performance of each individual CATV amplifier must be better than that required for audio amplifiers. Stability of amplifiers that work up to a 1 GHz is more difficult to achieve than for amplifiers that work only up to 20 KHz. Although RF amps typically work into a 75 Ohm loads, they must be designed to be stable into any load from a short circuit, to a complete open. The list differences could go on, but if you pick up a textbook on audio design, and one on RF design, you will see that the RF design is or complex. Bob Stanton |
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![]() "Bob-Stanton" wrote in message om... (John Atkinson) wrote in message . com... (Audio Guy) wrote on r.a.h-e in message ... Audio is a trivial application, they learn about power supply design and amplification, which is pretty much all there is to audio amplifiers, in their early years and then go on to much more interesting and challenging concepts. I see statements like this from time to time, yet I am not so sure that audio design is "trivial." There are not many other design fields where an amplifier: has to provide up to 30dB of voltage gain; act as a voltage source into a wide and arbitrary range of load impedances and do so in an unconditionally stable manner; have a passband noise contribution at least 90dB down from 1W into 8 ohms, no matter what its voltage gain and ultimate power delivery; have distortion components under all load conditions that are below the threshold of hearing no matter what the program material is; and do all the above over at least three-decade, ie, a 10-octave passband. Thoughts, gentlemen? I would suggest that designing, say, a typical RF amplifier is, by comparison, "trivial" but, of course, I may just be missing something :-) I agree that designing a state of the art audio amplifier is not trivial, for the reasons you stated above. Designing an RF amplifier is more challenging than designing a audio power amplifier. For example, a typical CATV RF amplifier would be 40 MHz - 1 GHz, and have 18 to 33 dB gain. Its' basic layout is very similar to an audio power amplifier. The CATV amp will have: a couple push-pull stages of bipolar transistors, a requirement for flat response, and for very low second and third order distortion. [snip] I did some Google reading, and it appears that commercial CATV amplifier is a very demanding case. However, design of a CATV amplifier has different problems; it is not simply the case that it is more complex. Were it not for the cascade requirement, one could make the case that the audio amplifier is a greater challenge. In fact, I am not aware of any audio amplifier ever produced that could meet the "analogous" CATV specs. For an uncascaded RF amplifier, some characteristics of the problem are relaxed compared to the audio amp. Since the RF amplifier is not baseband, distortion in the signal does not appear directly in the modulated signal. Even with simple class AB designs, very high power output can be obtained with a small component count, since the distortion products are broadband and not concentrated around the carrier. By contrast, since the audio amplifier is a baseband instrument, the distortion products are largely concentrated in the passband. CATV amplifiers operate into a controlled impedance. The requirement that they must survive a short is not equivalent to the challenge which audio amplifiers encounter, where the load is an electrodynamic mechanical system that provides a load to the system which is a function of frequency, and, when accounting for nonlinear effects, amplitude and mechanical state. If an audio amplifier were required to meet a spec with 50 of them in cascade, we would see much more of the Halcro level of engineering. |
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
I did some Google reading, and it appears that commercial CATV amplifier is a very demanding case. However, design of a CATV amplifier has different problems; it is not simply the case that it is more complex. Were it not for the cascade requirement, one could make the case that the audio amplifier is a greater challenge. In fact, I am not aware of any audio amplifier ever produced that could meet the "analogous" CATV specs. For an uncascaded RF amplifier, some characteristics of the problem are relaxed compared to the audio amp. That's right, they have a different set of problems. There is a hidden complexity in RF circuits. A componet at audio frequencies is simple single impedance. At RF a resistor is a network of three componets (resistance, lead inductance, body capacitance). All these |
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
CATV amplifiers operate into a controlled impedance. The requirement that they must survive a short is not equivalent to the challenge which audio amplifiers encounter, where the load is an electrodynamic mechanical system that provides a load to the system which is a function of frequency, and, when accounting for nonlinear effects, amplitude and mechanical state. Yes, a speaker systems provide a load that is a complex impedance, and one that can change slightly due to nonlinear effects. The RF amplifer can see a greater load variation. It must of stable with an accidental low impedance (short) located anywhere along the transmission line. RF amps are typically tested by sliding a low impedance (about 1 Ohm) along a sloted line, on the output of the amplifier. Here is the impedance variation the RF amplifier sees as the resistor is moved along the sloted line: Wavelengths Impedance 0.025 1.0 +j 12 0.050 1.1 +j 25 0.075 1.2 +j 38 0.100 1.5 +j 55 0.125 2.0 +j 75 0.150 2.9 +j 103 0.175 4.9 +j 147 0.200 10.5 +j 230 0.225 40.6 +j 470 0.250 5625.0 +j 0.00 0.275 40.6 -j 470 0.300 10.5 -j 230 0.325 4.9 -j 147 0.350 2.9 -j 103 0.375 2.0 -j 75 0.400 1.5 -j 55 0.425 1.2 -j 38 0.450 1.1 -j 25 0.475 1.0 -j 12 0.500 1.0 -j 0.00 This variation of impedance (going from short, to inductive, to open, to capacitive) is much greater than an audio amplifier would ever see from and electrodynamic mechanical nonlinear system. Bob Stanton |
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
Since the RF amplifier is not baseband, distortion in the signal does not appear directly in the modulated signal. Interference beats do appear on the video (on the TV screen). If one takes a signal generator and inserts an interfering signal (sinewave) on an RF line, it will cause wavey lines to appear on video. The the threshold of visibility is -60 dB. In audio terms, that would be 0.01% distortion. The threshold of interference visibility for video, seems to be about the same as the threshold of distortion audibility for audio. Even with simple class AB designs, very high power output can be obtained with a small component count, since the distortion products are broadband and not concentrated around the carrier. By contrast, since the audio amplifier is a baseband instrument, the distortion products are largely concentrated in the passband. Audio amplifiers and CATV amplifiers are both broadband products. They both face the same distortion challenges. A RF amplifier tested with a signal of two sinewaves, say at 400 MHz and 500 MHz, will generate exactly the same kind of second order and third order products as an audio amplifier with a signal of 400 Hz and 500 Hz. For example, the audio amplifier will generate sum and difference distortion products of 100 Hz and 900 Hz. The RF amplifier will gernerate sum and difference products of 100 MHz and 900 MHz. (And so on, for all the other second and third order products.) Bob Stanton |
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"Bob-Stanton" wrote in message
om The threshold of visibility is -60 dB. In audio terms, that would be 0.01% distortion. -60 dB is 0.1% The threshold of interference visibility for video, seems to be about the same as the threshold of distortion audibility for audio. Yes, even under the most ideal conditions, audibility of nonlinear distortion seems to go away someplace around or below 0.1%. Under non-ideal conditions, several percent nonlinear distortion can be missed. |
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ...
"Bob-Stanton" wrote in message om The threshold of visibility is -60 dB. In audio terms, that would be 0.01% distortion. -60 dB is 0.1% Yes, I agree. My mistake -20 dB = 10% distortion -40 dB = 1% distortion -60 dB = 0.1% distortion It just proves the old saying: "There are three kinds of people in this world. Those who can do math and those who can't." :-) Bob Stanton |
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