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Re: [ARSCLIST] Stereo records.



Several reputable engineers have proven that a triode tube is inherently more linear than a transistor. That is, a triode is much more acceptable without feedback than a transistor without feedback. They tested tubes like the 6sn7, 37, 101, and the like. Transformer coupled, they produce very low distortion of any kind, can last 20,000 hours and have very few parts. The reason you don't see much transformer coupled designs like this is that they were very expensive to build. Good input and interstage transformers have always been hard to produce. But that doesn't mean in the real world you're going to use archaic single ended circuits with zero feedback.

Tubes produce more even order harmonic distortion. On the other hand, if you have push-pull tubes, the even order harmonic distortion is often canceled out more than the odd harmonic distortion, subjectively a less pleasing sound. Psychoacoustic research has shown that people will accept even ordered distortion much more so than odd ordered harmonics. I don't much mind harmonic distortion as much as IM/TIM distortion and the problems associated with too much overall loop feedback. I've heard class A single ended transistor amps that sound like tube amps (but with drive!). They had zero feedback, fewer stages, and predominantly 2nd, 3rd and 4th harmonic distortion. The measured harmonic distortion was close to .5%, but SUBJECTIVELY, the sound was cleaner than that of the transistor amp with more stages, tons of feedback, push-pull complimentary, bells and whistles. I think the single ended class A transistor amp also clips and compresses more naturally than does a complicated amp. Feedback can only do so much before it falls apart. With a simple circuit, it just compresses and saturates. But none of this can hold a candle to the awful distortion when you screw up digital.

Those field coil power supplies cost more than most transistor amps. The permalloy and nickel cores are 'spensive!
Phillip


I wonder what some of you will think of this: http://cygnus.ipal.org/mirror/www.passlabs.com/seclassa.htm
----- Original Message ----- From: "steven c" > Two thoughts...
1) The whole point of using tube amplifiers is the fact that what distortion
they do create is much more pleasant to listen to than the distortion
of solid-state amplifiers (in fact, it may be that tube amps need to
be driven slightly into distortion to produce their desired sound!).
As a blues harmonica player, I WANT an overdriven, distorted sound...
and, as a result, have to use small tube amps (I can overdrive my
only solid-state amp, but the results grate on my nerves!). I would
assume this is because an overdriven tube amp produces a distorted
waveform, but NOT one resembling a square wave (tubes approach
cut-off gradually)...while an overdriven tranistor simply goes
so far and no farther, producing pseudo-square wave output?!


2) It would seem to me that if field coils are being used as they
once were (they were also the filter chokes for the B+ supply)...
using them would lead to problems with audible hum? Of course, for
$15,000 they could afford to provide a filtered-DC supply for the
field coil(s)...

Steven C. Barr




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