View Full Version : Tube vs Solid State?
bpaulovich
11-27-2003, 09:15 PM
Can somone tell me why the tubes are so highly thought of yet the WPC are so much lower than solid states? In other words, why such a high price for only 25-35 watts with a tuber? How can such a low wattage give such a great sound. Want something (sterio) good for medium voulume classical/jazz in a fairly large room, currently have JBL Decade 26's, may upgrade them, but I just like the accurate highs. Currently have an intergrated Yamaha A-500 (100 watt I think? -bought used) Novice here of course. Thanks in advance, bobpaulo
topspeed
11-28-2003, 12:45 AM
Can somone tell me why the tubes are so highly thought of yet the WPC are so much lower than solid states? In other words, why such a high price for only 25-35 watts with a tuber? How can such a low wattage give such a great sound. Want something (sterio) good for medium voulume classical/jazz in a fairly large room, currently have JBL Decade 26's, may upgrade them, but I just like the accurate highs. Currently have an intergrated Yamaha A-500 (100 watt I think? -bought used) Novice here of course. Thanks in advance, bobpaulo
Bob, this is question that has been debated since the dawn of time (or at the very least, the dawn of the transistor).
Here's my take: It's an absolute myth that tubes don't/can't provide the same wpc as ss. However, it's easier and usually far cheaper to get a truckload of wpc from a ss vs. tube. That said, wpc is all about bragging rights for the most part. Sort of a techno-geek's version of mine is bigger than yours. Consider that the vast majority of speakers are rated for anywhere from 84db-99db (or higher) at 1 WATT measured at 1 meter. That's just 1 WATT! Believe me, 84db is plenty loud and 99db is approaching ridiculously loud! Now, it takes TWICE the watts to affect a 3db increase. Therefore, a 200 watt amp will be 3db louder than a 100watt amp. Barely noticeable. So you can see, massive watts are nice but not necessarily the best way to judge an amp. More watts will allow more headroom for fast transients and might be better for really tough loads. Current is far more important, imo. Which would you rather have: 35 watts of pristine, gorgeous power or 200 watts of grating, etched, crap?
Now then, why are low wattage tubes so expensive? They certainly don't have to be (witness ASL) but given the market and opportunity, lord knows they can be (see Hovland, Cary, ARC, and hundreds others).
One fact is that the parts in tubes are simply more expensive than ss. A transistor is what, 20 cents? A vintage Svetlana tube can be hideously expensive by comparison. Bare in mind tho, that ss amps can be every bit as overpriced as tubes. A solid state Krell Master Reference is $75,000usd...EACH! Bottom line, all amps are as expensive as they are because the market allow them to be. This is especially true in the "hi-end" where mythology, black magic, and in particular ego run rampant.
Finally, tubes vs. ss is simply personal preference. Broad generalization are that tubes offer better musicality and are more euphonic (some would say "colored") sound than ss. SS proponents claim they have more accurate highs and much better slam and energy in the lower octaves. Digital amps are a new technology and they claim the best of both worlds. Are any of these true? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Which one is best for you? Go listen to as many as you can matched to your speakers and then you tell us. It's your taste, your room, and most importantly your money.
Good luck and buy what moves you.
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
11-28-2003, 12:53 PM
... as it's very helpful. First off, speakers and amplification [whether tubes or SS] need to considered TOGETHER. The higher your speakers efficiency the less wpc you'll need [fact]. The next issue is that of what exactly are're paying [or looking] for; wpc, aesthetics, build quality, topology, sound [or lack of artifacts or possibly they're introduction]. Cost doesn't relate to one and not the other factors. I.E. the most powerful amp is not always the most expensive. And power isn't the sole consideration from your amplification. Trust me, the attraction of tubes has nothing to do with wpc. The short answer, is that proponents believe they sound more lifelike than SS and make the replay experience more enjoyable. And judging by my avatar and signature link, which do you think I prefer? Naturally, YMMV.
MikE
1) Read the 3 articles under the the posting 3 interesting articles. They describe just about everything you need to know.
2) Wattage has absolutely nothing, absolutely nothing to do with the quality of sound. In fact, go down and listen to a string bass live, then go home and listen to SS system of string bass. Many SS amps and speakers bloat the bass, making it appear to have more, but it is Not accurate. Electrolytic caps are a main reason for bass bloating. Some SS amps are great in the bass, just depends.
3) High cost is do to expensive high quality parts (superior sounding parts) used in tube amps, and SS amps. For example, some sonically superior resistors cost $5.00/resistor.
There are cheap tube amps out there that sound like crap, using the same crappy cheap parts. The price usually reflects the quality. You usually don't get something for nothing. (However, some may sacrifice some portion, like cosmetics, or long lasting parts etc.)
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
11-28-2003, 01:09 PM
Why the very old [pre-1935] and obscure monikor? Do you have some? Considering they're cost, pray tell actually use them!? Or is it just an "older is better" thing? I'm partial to single-plates in 2a3s and globes in 45s myself but the later has been replaced by a current production 45 tube. Which is very hard to believe but so is the fact that anyone would build them again. And actually, there are now more than just one manufacturer building that tube type today. As for me, usually I'm of the "older is better" mindset, least with my valves... but not my women!
MikE
[QUOTE=Mwalsdor_cscc_edu]... And power isn't the sole consideration from your amplification.
With my speakers which are 103 db sensitive, 100 or 200 watts would be superfluous! Hell, even the 25 in the tube amp I use aren't all necessary.
The reason we use tubes is just as you said - they are more lifelike sounding, or "live-like" sounding than SS. I don't find the difference between tubes and SS to be nearly as dramatic as the sound of vinyl is superior to CD, but the diffs are musically significant.
First of all be careful of those that claim Tubes are superior than SS. They can be but not always.
Like the others have said - most of the power you get from your speakers are generated by the first watt....many speakers require more watts for dynamics because they are not perfect at efficiency devices.
In the 1970s the Sugden A21 was one of the best amplifeirs available at a mere 10 watts and it would drive practically anything. Interestingly the Sugden's are not High Current amplifiers. Another misnomer that does not equate to good sound. High current is need because of less effiecent careless speaker builders who make speakers that require huge beastly amplifiers - and still produce LESS volume than many high end systems with a 3 watt amp.
High Speaker sensitivity and higher impedence will be much louder with a few watts than low sensitivity and low impedence with mega watts.
Fo instance. An Owner of a 110db klipshhorn 8ohm will get 110 decibals(volume) with a 1 watt amp. If he had that old 10 watt Sugden he would get:
110db 1 watt
113db 2 watts(double the power for a 3db gain)
116db 4 watts
119db 8watts
~120db 10watts. on that 1970s Sugden
During the 80s the big receiver makers came out with high watt crappy sounding receivers - but because they were crappy they needed something to sell...guess WATT? Yes WATT is WATT was the things they sold to the masses who ddn't know better.
Speaker makers of course would rather stick drivers in a cheap box and fill it with foam, than actually design a high quality box free of resonances. So the speaker makers slugged the sound with ferrofluid cooling, foam and stuff to weigh it all down to make up for the 2 cents worth of cheap garbage wood that would ring like a bell. sensitivity dropped like a stone in the range of 82db.
Do the Math. You want to get 120db with an 82 db speaker(and let's say it is 8ohm to be nice as typically they were 4 ohms which would "really be like 79db sensitive.
82db 1 watt
85db 2W
88db 4W
91db 8W
94 db 16W
97db 32W
100db 64W
103db 128W
106db 256W
109db 512W
111db 1024watts
115db 2048watts
118db 4096watts
121db 8192watts
Guess WATT. Most speakers can't handle more than 200 watts. So even with a mighty 250 Watts per channel and assuming the speaker rated at 200 watts can actually take that power at a sustained period(most can't), you;re still significanly behind in the volume department.
None of this talks about quality either. Most high watt amps are noisy. You pay more to get more watts, when you could have purchased a speaker from a competant designer that used a good box. Where would you rather put your money. A GOOD high sensitive speaker and a GOOD low watt amp and get better sound quality and much LOUDER volume or buy an incompetant heavily damped speaker to make up for poor boxes and HUGE power amplifiers to get Less volume???
I have seen JVC ghetto blaster advertising 400 watts. I have heard an 11 watt Tube amp running my speakers. Guess which ones sound 3-5 times louder...not the JVC, guess which sounds a lot clearer has more bass better highs - not the JVC.
Sadly I see receivers priced from $600 - $900.00 in a given line. The difference is say 70 watts to 90watts. Basically no difference in volume. They throw in some silly feature or a 4rth VCR input or Stadium surround mode which doesn't resemble a stadium - and more to the point why would you want it to? Hefty premium that cost the company an extra dollar MAYBE.
The ASL AQ 1003DT tube amp is 30 watts and won't run a difficult to drive loudspeaker that well. It's pur class A but not High Current(whatever the hell this misnomer means. It doesn't need to be because buyers of these amps would not buy stupidly designed 2 ohm speakers(Stats and Planars are exempt from this rant because they offer something that is generally the nature of the design).
But tubes are not inherently better. The Sugden Is a low powered solid state amp. Generally GOOD tubes offer a kind of distortion which is much more agreeable than the brick wall sort that non Class A SS amps give out.
Mr Peabody
11-28-2003, 07:18 PM
Not all tube amps are low power. Audio Research makes some that are 100 wpc and higher. Tube technology must be improving some because, yet somewhat expensive, I have heard Audio Research and VTL monoblocks that have impressive bass response for any amp tube or SS. Some SS amp companies also try to immulate the sound of tubes. So it is really a matter of listening and trying to find what appeals to your ears. My take, and realize these are generalizations, is that tubes excel in the midrange frequencies where they can present a haunting reality feel. Solid State amps are faster and better able to deliver transcients and dynamics of music better. SS I find typically extend up to higher frequencies. I think it's pretty well recognized that most tube amps are bloated or loose in the lower frequencies where most SS amps, especially higher current amps, can deliver a fast clean bass response. It's a fact that entry level tube amps can be noisy. It's the single ended triode tube amps that are in the extreme low power and you will have to have a mega efficient speaker. Which to me seems to be an oxi-moron because I have yet to hear a good sounding efficient speaker. I have found that efficiency seems to be a trade off for sound quality.
I don't know what price range you were in but Audio Research make a nice integrated amp which I think is around 50wpc. It's strong, I heard it drive a pair of Martin Logan's which is no easy task for any amp. It's priced around $3k. You can find good deals on Krell integrated amps. They have a new kav-400iL that sells for $2,500. that is 200 wpc with class A preamp section and fully balanced circuits. This new amp at this price is also driving down the re-sale price of Krell's used integrated amps. If you are not needing big power the British integrated amps from companies like Arcam or Creek offer great sound for the money. Some may match a tube preamp with a SS power amp to try and get the best of both worlds. You'd think from the posts here that tube owners were the majority, but the old tube forum was more than dead and look at what people own under the poll on "General Audio", not too much tube gear listed. Not bashing it, I'd love to have a second system of tube gear. I choose solid state for the very observations I listed above.
mtrycraft
11-28-2003, 08:26 PM
1) In fact, go down and listen to a string bass live, then go home and listen to SS system of string bass. Many SS amps and speakers bloat the bass, making it appear to have more, but it is Not accurate. Electrolytic caps are a main reason for bass bloating. Some SS amps are great in the bass, just depends.
3) High cost is do to expensive high quality parts (superior sounding parts) used in tube amps, and SS amps. For example, some sonically superior resistors cost $5.00/resistor.
Hogwash. One only has to check the Fr plots and see how flat the SS amp really is in the bass band. No bloating. Garbage.
High cost part superior sounding? Yet another audio mythology. You have zero evidence for this, nor do your referenced articles.
mtrycraft
11-28-2003, 08:31 PM
Can somone tell me why the tubes are so highly thought of yet the WPC are so much lower than solid states? In other words, why such a high price for only 25-35 watts with a tuber? How can such a low wattage give such a great sound. Want something (sterio) good for medium voulume classical/jazz in a fairly large room, currently have JBL Decade 26's, may upgrade them, but I just like the accurate highs. Currently have an intergrated Yamaha A-500 (100 watt I think? -bought used) Novice here of course. Thanks in advance, bobpaulo
As Mr Peabody stated, not all are such low powered one. Usually/all SET are though. Perhaps that is what you are reading.
The price is high because people will pay it:) Simple marketing. If noboby bought it, price would come down for sure, or go out of business.
Great sound is very subjective and most are based on unreliable perceptions only, not based in reality.
What you have in the Yam should be very nice as is. Audio is full of hype and mythology.
spacedeckman
11-28-2003, 09:53 PM
expensive because of the iron. SS amps will always be cheaper by the watt since they need no output iron. A tube amp is totally dependent on iron to survive. Sure, some are more expensive than they should be, but your answer should have been more factual and less emotional. You're slipping boy.
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
11-28-2003, 10:19 PM
Is that SS bass is better than the bass from a tube-based system. Sure I've witnessed SS amps pump out some serious tight bass notes [yeah] and I've seen old [Dynaco] tube amps produce soft, warm bass [yuk]. And yet the most musical bass I've realized in my system is from my three [3] watt single-end triode with NOS "ST" [shouldered] 45 output tubes. My amp is switchable between 2a3 and 45 operation and the difference is obvious between those types. And while all the 45 tubes [NOS ST, globe or current production] sound fabulous, the bass is still different depending on which type I use. The globes are the least reliable, while most of the ST 45's produce a wonderful, musical bass that is tuneful, nimble and shaded with all the flavor of a real acoustic instrument. Of course, this is dependant on many other factors but in my system replace the amp and that same bass is missing in action, replace the 45 for a typical double-plate 2a3 and the rollicking timing is absent. As a point of clarification, the amp I use isn't cheap and uses a simple but sound topology and has killer output transformers. Which is the equivalent of drivers in a speaker. It also has upgraded parts of my choosing [and the designers blessing]. Though as suggested, the carbon film resistors I chose have a very minor effect over the stock units. The teflon coupling caps are hideously [comparitively] expensive and have a greater effect on the signal. Still, resistors, caps and wire are small beans compared to design, transformers and the selection of tubes.
MikE
Not all tube amps are low power. Audio Research makes some that are 100 wpc and higher. Tube technology must be improving some because, yet somewhat expensive, I have heard Audio Research and VTL monoblocks that have impressive bass response for any amp tube or SS. Some SS amp companies also try to immulate the sound of tubes. So it is really a matter of listening and trying to find what appeals to your ears. My take, and realize these are generalizations, is that tubes excel in the midrange frequencies where they can present a haunting reality feel."
Good points as generalizations, although some tube amps surpass SS in bass and high reproduction.
"Solid State amps are faster and better able to deliver transcients and dynamics of music better. SS I find typically extend up to higher frequencies. I think it's pretty well recognized that most tube amps are bloated or loose in the lower frequencies where most SS amps, especially higher current amps, can deliver a fast clean bass response. It's a fact that entry level tube amps can be noisy. It's the single ended triode tube amps that are in the extreme low power and you will have to have a mega efficient speaker. Which to me seems to be an oxi-moron because I have yet to hear a good sounding efficient speaker. I have found that efficiency seems to be a trade off for sound quality."
Again, very good points. I also have yet to hear a really good high efficiency speaker. Horns, contrary to popular belief have inherently high distortion. Radiotron designers handbook states basically that with a 3 1/2 octave bandbass, a horn will theoritically have 8% distortion, although measurements are generally around half that. And they don't do bass, period. They drop of at around 36 db/octave I believe.
"I don't know what price range you were in but Audio Research make a nice integrated amp which I think is around 50wpc. It's strong, I heard it drive a pair of Martin Logan's which is no easy task for any amp. It's priced around $3k. You can find good deals on Krell integrated amps. They have a new kav-400iL that sells for $2,500. that is 200 wpc with class A preamp section and fully balanced circuits. This new amp at this price is also driving down the re-sale price of Krell's used integrated amps. If you are not needing big power the British integrated amps from companies like Arcam or Creek offer great sound for the money. Some may match a tube preamp with a SS power amp to try and get the best of both worlds. You'd think from the posts here that tube owners were the majority, but the old tube forum was more than dead and look at what people own under the poll on "General Audio", not too much tube gear listed. Not bashing it, I'd love to have a second system of tube gear. I choose solid state for the very observations I listed above.
Because of the way electrolytics change the sound, the bass can be somewhat not accurate with SS amps. Good ones will be excellent.
Nice post Mr. Peabody.
Hogwash. One only has to check the Fr plots and see how flat the SS amp really is in the bass band. No bloating. Garbage."
One piece of the story. If you think "one plot", one measurement, tells the whole story, you are in a dream world. Each part, each design has its own sonic signature, with electrolytic capacitors being about the worse, although some resistors are about as bad. It is called DA and DF, which are very real problems and measureable (see http://www.capacitors.com/picking_capacitors/pickcap.htm). Special tests are performed to measure it. It is pure physics my friend.
High cost part superior sounding? Yet another audio mythology. You have zero evidence for this, nor do your referenced articles.
Live in your own fantasy dream world. The AES, Electrical Engineers who print their Journal etc are all wrong and you are right. Visions of grandeur have we? Please come back to reality, ok?
As Mr Peabody stated, not all are such low powered one. Usually/all SET are though. Perhaps that is what you are reading.
The price is high because people will pay it:) Simple marketing. If noboby bought it, price would come down for sure, or go out of business.
Great sound is very subjective and most are based on unreliable perceptions only, not based in reality.
Baloney. There are real sonic differences between systems, and room acoustics, but there are systems that bring "home" more correct information than others. To think otherwise is nonsense.
What you have in the Yam should be very nice as is. Audio is full of hype and mythology.
And you are posting much of it. Go into a store and explain away the sonic differences between amps and preamps. I am sure you will take home the cheapest and worst piece of junk and delude yourself into thinking that it sounds as good as any other system. Hey, it should be easy for you to convince yourself.
Well, at least you saved some money and I don't have to come over to hear it.
Enjoy.
skeptic
11-29-2003, 05:24 PM
Can somone tell me why the tubes are so highly thought of yet the WPC are so much lower than solid states? In other words, why such a high price for only 25-35 watts with a tuber? How can such a low wattage give such a great sound. Want something (sterio) good for medium voulume classical/jazz in a fairly large room, currently have JBL Decade 26's, may upgrade them, but I just like the accurate highs. Currently have an intergrated Yamaha A-500 (100 watt I think? -bought used) Novice here of course. Thanks in advance, bobpaulo
Tube amplifier quality and price vary all over the lot from relatively cheap to out of sight. From miserable performing to outstanding. So does solid state. Tube amplifiers can be made to be extremely powerful, but not quite as cheaply as solid state.
A few months ago, I wrote a few threads about why I think tube amplifiers generally cost more than comparable solid state amplifiers and why I think that the best solid state amplifiers can be made to outperform the best tube amplfiers. However each amplifier should be taken on its own merit.
Here are some reasons why tube amplifiers cost so much and much more than they used to;
relatively limited avaliability of suitable parts in a world that retooled for sold state 30 years ago, a small niche market means no economy of scale, the nature of tubes means more labor intensive to manufacture, fewer electronics engineers familiar with tube circuit design, and relatively little competition. Had tube technology remained viable over the last 30 years or so and not been replaced by solid state electronics, amplifiers which now cost $5000 would cost $50 instead.
Tube amplifiers for industrial use could be manufactured to produce hundreds or even thousands of watts but for home use, the practical limit is usually about 100 watts per channel. There are several reasons for this but among them is the cost of the output transformers and the need to dissipate a large amount of heat. 60 to 75 watt per channel amplifiers from companies like McIntosh, Marantz, Dynaco, Harman Kardon, and even Eico, Lafayette Radio, Bogen, Stromberg Carlson and others were among the most powerful and best available in the early 1960s with the first four manufacturers being at the top of the quality heap.
People looking to play very loud rock music through inefficient speakers will not be happy with smaller tube amplifiers. Neither will most users of inefficient electrostatic types. However, for most home use, 60 to 75 wpc or even 25 to 30 with more efficient speakers is adequate.
Vacuum tube amplifiers are not inherently lower distortion than solid state. In fact quite the opposite. Just look at the manufacturers' specs. Most high quality ss amps beat the best high quality tube amps by a wide margin. However, these specifications don't tell the whole story.
Sound systems for the home today are rarely engineered, they are thrown together like a tossed salad taking a piece from here, another from there with little rhyme or reason. There is a trend among manufacturers of so called audiophile speakers to market small two way ported systems that are very bright sounding. Audiophiles also for some reason like moving coil cartridges which often have a high frequency peak making their systems sound even brighter. As a consequence, they look to vacuum tube amplifiers which IMO always seem to roll off the high end (except the OTL types like Futterman or NY Audio Labs) probably because of their output transformers and do not provide a very high damping factor because of the high output impedence of vacuum tube plate circuits. These frequency response anomolies tend to cancel each other and so come together to form a kind of synergy resulting is a flatter overall frequency response even though it is somewhat hit or miss and unpredictable. One thing that can always bail them out is the availability of low cost subwoofers with high powered solid state amplifiers which take most of the power demands off the rest of the system. Avoiding equalizers like the plague, they also buy expensive speaker wires sometimes having very high shunt capacitance further attenuating the high end. This method of designing a sound system is neither efficient or always effective but it is never cheap in the long run. And when they find the nirvana they are looking for, they always will tell you that practically anything besides what they have selected as "best" is inferior.
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 05:34 PM
Live in your own fantasy dream world. The AES, Electrical Engineers who print their Journal etc are all wrong and you are right. Visions of grandeur have we? Please come back to reality, ok?
You have yet to show you correct. You present an article from 1972/3. That is supposed to do what?
Did it include a DBT listeing session? Have any to present?
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 05:35 PM
Because of the way electrolytics change the sound, the bass can be somewhat not accurate with SS amps. Good ones will be excellent.
Nice post Mr. Peabody.
You just don;t have the evidence for this. Care to post some FR spectrums where the SS is not accurate in the bass? What nonsense.
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 05:37 PM
expensive because of the iron. SS amps will always be cheaper by the watt since they need no output iron. A tube amp is totally dependent on iron to survive. Sure, some are more expensive than they should be, but your answer should have been more factual and less emotional. You're slipping boy.
Oh, come now. Output iron costs $10000? $1000?
Tubes cost more because people will pay the exhorbitant prices for yesteryears retro products.
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 05:43 PM
Is that SS bass is better than the bass from a tube-based system. Sure I've witnessed SS amps pump out some serious tight bass notes [yeah] and I've seen old [Dynaco] tube amps produce soft, warm bass [yuk]. And yet the most musical bass I've realized in my system is from my three [3] watt single-end triode with NOS "ST" [shouldered] 45 output tubes.
MikE
Well, that is a matter of perception only. And, perception may not be reality. Well known phenomenon.
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 05:45 PM
And you are posting much of it. Go into a store and explain away the sonic differences between amps and preamps. I am sure you will take home the cheapest and worst piece of junk and delude yourself into thinking that it sounds as good as any other system. Hey, it should be easy for you to convince yourself.
Well, at least you saved some money and I don't have to come over to hear it.
Enjoy.
No. I would base my choice on a DBT listeing. No difference, then flexibility.
I will leave delusion to the gullible ones.
skeptic
11-29-2003, 06:41 PM
You just don;t have the evidence for this. Care to post some FR spectrums where the SS is not accurate in the bass? What nonsense.
High quality capacitively coupled solid state amplifiers typically show outstanding linearity of frequency response, negligable distortion, excellent input output linearity, low noise, and outstanding operating stability. In this regard they are usually far better than their vacuum tube counterparts which have irregular frequency response often exceeding +/- 1 db over the audio band, poor damping factors, and high distortion rarely if ever rated at less than 1/2 to 1 percent combined harmonic and IM. Additionally, they are subject to microphonics especially from low bass. Unless they have unusually large well designed output transformers, they usually have a 3db down point not far below 20 hz at best. I can't think of one sub woofer at any price that uses a vacuum tube amplifier. Does such a thing exist?
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
11-29-2003, 06:53 PM
Sorry not takers here. Not interested in re-visiting circular arguments. MikE
skeptic
11-29-2003, 07:00 PM
Oh, come now. Output iron costs $10000? $1000?
Tubes cost more because people will pay the exhorbitant prices for yesteryears retro products.
The designs were the best that could be done at the time. They were abandoned for a reason. Technology passed them by. Even in the primitive days of bipolar transistors, outstanding products which eclipsed the best the tube manufacturers could do were possible. The Crown DC 300 introduced in 1968 was a watershed and benchmark. Even by today's standards, it is a rugged, reliable, excellent performer at what are now giveaway prices on the used market.
There have been absolutely no new developments in vacuum tube audio in the last 40 years. With the sole exception of slightly better interstage coupling capacitors, the parts are the same, the circuits are the same, and the limitations and problems are the same. Only the customers are new. In fact, many of the best parts commonly used way back when are difficult to find if you can get them at all.
skeptic
11-29-2003, 07:23 PM
Tuned ported systems such as Theil Small designs depend on what amounts to an undamped resonance in the driver at a frequency coincident with the tuning of a resonant air column, allowing for very efficient coupling between the driver and the room around that frequency. There are a lot of drawbacks to this but its advantage is that you can get some relatively deep bass with low power from a surprisingly small driver. Vacuum tube amplifiers are ideal for this application because unlike solid state amplifiers, their high output impedence doesn't damp the driver's resonance peak. By comparison, solid state amplifiers having very low output impedence will damp out this resonance effectively reducing bass output and making the speaker sound relatively thinner and brighter. When coupled with a small dome tweeter these systems tend to be on the bright side to begin with and solid state amplifiers exaggerate this brightness while tube amplifiers with their high end rolloff due to eddy current and hysteresis losses in their output transformers tend to reduce it. The difference becomes especially striking with mc phonograph cartridges many of which have a high frequency peak due to their excessive moving mass compared to their damping or with a cd player and a poorly made cd having a high frequency peak as well. Small wonder that the major complaint today among audiophiles is that solid state amplifiers and cds sound shrill and harsh. But to those of us who grew up in the mellow mushy indistinct world of moving magnet cartridges with very flat frequency responses and indistinct sounding vacuum tube amplifiers, today's audiophile's cure is as bad as the disease.
Too bad some are really out of it. If you, Crafts and Skeptic, understood what DA and DF meant, you wouldn't have made such stupid comments.
DA is the most important of the two, and is the slow release of electrons from the insulation when discharging or reluctance to accept electrons when charging.
Instead of discharging and charging perfectly, the incoming note, say bass note, there is a slower release, causing a distortion (not harmonic or intermodulation distortion that is typically measured) of the note. This is Physics and can be measured. This causes the note to sound fuller, extending longer, Not an actual change the amplitude as you would try to have us believe.
One can easily do ones own test by simply purchasing two capacitors of the same UF, one electrolytic/bypolar, and one polypropolene and inserting them into a circuit. I don't think the public needs you twos permission do they???????? Let them decide or are you afraid of what they might find out??
As mentioned before, in audio subjective testing, DBTs are worthless. Scholars themselves won't use the terms "factual" or "proof" only "indicates" or "seems to indicate". Hardly factual.
Get back to reality.
mtrycraft
11-29-2003, 10:36 PM
Too bad some are really out of it. If you, Crafts and Skeptic, understood what DA and DF meant, you wouldn't have made such stupid comments.
DA is the most important of the two, and is the slow release of electrons from the insulation when discharging or reluctance to accept electrons when charging.
Instead of discharging and charging perfectly, the incoming note, say bass note, there is a slower release, causing a distortion (not harmonic or intermodulation distortion that is typically measured) of the note. This is Physics and can be measured. This causes the note to sound fuller, extending longer, Not an actual change the amplitude as you would try to have us believe.
One can easily do ones own test by simply purchasing two capacitors of the same UF, one electrolytic/bypolar, and one polypropolene and inserting them into a circuit. I don't think the public needs you twos permission do they???????? Let them decide or are you afraid of what they might find out??
As mentioned before, in audio subjective testing, DBTs are worthless. Scholars themselves won't use the terms "factual" or "proof" only "indicates" or "seems to indicate". Hardly factual.
Get back to reality.
Where do you get this nonsense? You been reading the wrong stuff. Since you can measure it, please give us the data. The ones I have seen are at the 5th decimal place. Be my guest, claim you can hear that stuff.
Oh, the cap test, better be under DBT. The last one was null but hey, we are still waiting for all the positive ones.
DBT are only worthless to the less inforemd ones, as one would expect. Thanks for the info from fantasy land. LOL
skeptic
11-30-2003, 04:29 AM
People who have something exotic, esoteric, or just plain different to sell that is expensive but can't demonstrate any sound electrical engineering proof of their claims of superiority through those measurements which invariably describe mathematically completely the faults in transferring or amplifiying electrical waveforms always come up with some off the wall gobbledegook hocus pocus like strand jumping, fermi velocity, DF, DA, and LaDeeDah, to explain the unexplainable or at least impress and confuse those who are untrained and don't know technobabble when they see it. And they are always right and the electrical engineers and mathematicians are always wrong. If capacitors were a bad way to decouple a loudspeaker from the dc bias of the output stage, the world could just as easily have stuck to transformers or have gone completely over to dc coupling. The plain fact is that not only are electrolytic capacitors cheaper than transformers for output decoupling, they beat them every which way there is. And not only that, but your loudspeakers have electrolytic capacitors in them as well, including in the crossover to the mid range where the human ear is MOST sensitive.
Geoffcin
11-30-2003, 06:32 AM
I'm a SS guy. I've had SS equipment for over 25 years, From my days of the "big" Pioneer SX-1280 and EPI speakers (which I still have) to my current "big" PS Audio amp driving my 3.6 maggies, I've been happy with mostly all of it. I never really had a chance to play with tubes, or even much cared too. However, I just got back from a visit to the "in-laws" for Thanksgiving, and got a chance to use a very interesting piece of equipment. A 1964 vintage Top-of-the-line Sears console! Before you guys start laughing, Sears was just about the ONLY way you could buy Hi-fi stuff if you weren't in the major cities like NY or LA back then. @ $469 in 1964 money, this was one expensive item too. Sears gave you three years to pay it off! This puppy was in MINT condition, the wood lovingly oiled over the years, but unfortunately it had seen little service since 1979, the year of the loss of the owner. A quick check of everything showed it all works. I didn't have a tube tester (or even know where to find one) but I changed out the tubes to a set of new-in-box Sylvania tubes that were there. OK, put on some FM, and guess what..SOUND!
Sweet, euphonic, rolled off, easy to listen to all day, music! Got out the old Christmas records, changed out the "electro-voice" stylus (with diamond tip)! and we had sweet, euphonic, rolled off, easy to listen to all day, Christmas music! Anything below 100 or above ~5000 or so was out of it's range, but what it did, it did sweetly, and was very pleasant to listen too for many hrs. (the eggnog was flowing pretty freely too)! Now I'm sure that the THD was much higher than any SS gear that I've ever owned, but it sure didn't stop us from enjoying it. I've got a soft spot now in my heart for old equipment. I'm not going to toss my gear out and go get a vintage console, but I did have some fun with the old gear, and was not unimpressed with it's sound. Actually, it was quite good reproducing the female & male voice. One of the FM stations had a Beatles marathon going on, and it was good fun to imagine that we were back in 1965, transported back in sound by this vintage console. (did I say the eggnog was flowing pretty good)?
Cheers all!
AAAHHH,,,,,, Some heat. Some light. Some catfights.
First, have y'all noticed those double-underlined green nouns that are really imbedded ads? Roll your mouse over them and get an ad. Click on them and you probably go to a commercial website. Now I see the reason for this new format: MONEY!
[I edited this to respell a certain common term to be the 'word' Hye-Fye
because the correct version automatically adds an advertising link.]
I paid $500 for a NEW pair of mirror-matched mono-100 Futttermans, direct from Mr Futterman, when the rest of you were Ga-Ga over solid state in 1976. (I bought my Stereo-60 Futterman in 1974 for $300.) After 15 years of very substantial use my mono-100 Futtermans were retubed and updated to the self-biasing NYAL versions in 1991 for $400. The Mono-100's now cost me a grand total of $900. So tube amps are not expensive IF you did not wait until someone is spending big add dollars to dangle them under your nose! Timing is Everything.
Unless you have heard OTL's such as the various Futtermans and maybe the Fournier driving 8-ohm (and better yet, 16 ohm) Tympani, do not presume to say that "SS is better than tubies". Because the Futtermans driving Tympani combination will match live recitals of instruments and vocalists. Most speaker-amp combinations simply cannot.
BUT!
A Futterman driving KLH-9's sounded EXACTLY the same as a GAS amp driving KLH-9's which also sounded EXACTLY the same as an HK Citation 12 driving KLH-9's.
Note that:
Futterman = OTL Tubie
GAS amp = full push-pull Bongiorno SS design
HK Citation 12 = quasi-complimentary SS amp.
So.... it all depends on the speakers you are using!
Oh, when the above amp test was repeated on the Tympani, the results were
Futterman = Lifelike
GAS amp = Good smooth Hye-Fye Audiophile but not like the recitals.
HK Citation 12 = Full of metallic whiskers. Not pleasant to rub on your ears.
SS amps replaced tubie amps because there were a lot of bad tubie amps in the 1960's and earlier, and inexpensive SS simply sounded better to most consumers than inexpensive tubies. Audiophiles are quite willing to pursue the year's new holy grail, and prestiege manufacturers quickly found a deep well of SS-amp "improvements" to offer every year that would obsolete last years SS-amp products and put audiophiles on the trade-up treadmill. Every year, without fail, prestiege manufacturers would discover a "problem" with last years products which this years products managed to "solve". This is the basic trait of technology-driven products: whatever you buy will be obsoleted by next years offerings.
But if your rig can match live recitals, then you do not have to care, because the live recitals ain't gonna change!
spacedeckman
11-30-2003, 06:56 AM
There are just as many, if not more $10K amps on the SS side.
General comment from me was that tube will always be more expensive to produce and, hence, buy since you need to include output transformers. Even you can't find anything wrong in that statement.
If the economies of scale for both SS and tubes were exactly the same, tubes would still be more expensive due to the output transformers.
Nothing controversial said or inferred.
Space
Spacedeckman
OTL tubies do NOT have output transformers, while some SS amps also did have output transformers.
NYAL bought the rights and patents for the Futterman amps in 1976. Julius was selling the Futterman mono-100 for $500, and he had a 1-year backlog that was strictly generated by word-of-mouth. NYAL made minor improvements to the Futterman mono-100 with Julius' guidance, and then NYAL hyped and sold the NYAL version for $3000.
So you see, the cost of parts has a rather modest influence on selling price. The costs of hype and advertising does drive selling price. The financial desires of the principals also drives selling price. But the cost of manufacture is a more modest influence on selling price.
Geoffcin
11-30-2003, 07:30 AM
>>OTL tubies do NOT have output transformers, while some SS amps also did have output transformers.<<
Yes, this is one of the more interesting things about amp tech. Not all amps use the same topology. My SS amp has inputs for both direct coupled, and capactive coupled. I can tell you that at least with my amp, DC is the way it sounds best.
skeptic
11-30-2003, 07:54 AM
NY Audio Labs exhibited at the 1983 AES convention at the NY Hilton and later gave a very interesting presentation to invited AES members at the WQXR auditorium in the NY Times Building. Their engineers discussed the death bed testimony they took from Julius Futterman and the voluminous technical papers they got from his widow. They made several significant improvements including an excellent solid state power supply and they designed a test rig that allowed them to adjust the critical bias controls in five minutes instead of the entire day it took Futterman with his setup. These struck me as among the best sounding amplifiers I have ever heard, certainly the equal of anything any other tube manufacturer produced although I would say that there are solid state amplifiers that sound just as good to me. BTW, their A/B comparison was McIntosh 3000s, the source was a master tape played on an Ampex studio console and the speakers were JBL bookshelf models which as I recall belonged to Harvey Rosenberg's daughter. Harvey was the founder and president of NYAL and someone told me recently that he had died. The ingenuity of this design is that it allows vacuum tubes to deliver power to loudspeakers directly without the need for a transformer. This is the major reason IMO for its superior sound, the lack of an output transformer, not that it is tubes.
Mr Peabody
11-30-2003, 08:30 AM
Nothing brings out a firestorm of debate like tubes vs solid state, unless it's cd vs vinyl.
A couple observations from some of the posts.
When advising how much power one should buy, 35 watts may fill the room with sound but it takes power to reproduce bass. I don't want to open up another can of worms, I didn't say more power sounds better necessarily, it's just a fact that it takes power to reproduce ample bass. A 35 wpc rated amp may be able to do this as well, but then someone would have to admit that high current amps exist.
To those who think that newer is always better, I'd like to present as evidence the IC chip. This did nothing for amplification except make them cheaper to produce and sound quality to go down. The term "discrete circuitry" is not just a marketing term in my book. Manufacturers are not above "smoke & mirrors" to make a buck. Look at 7.1, is there actually any movies in 7.1? No, not to my knowledge. I'm just saying don't discard old technology without just cause.
It would stand to reason that closer tolerance parts would cost more and improve sound quality by using these parts, thus driving the cost of better amps up.
Manufacturers must know this debate rages on, why hasn't someone offered me an amp that has the slam and dynamics of a Krell along with the lushness and presence in the midrange of a good tube amp?
Those interested in capacitors may like to look at the large Dynaudio monoblocks they use for their listening tests. I have been told you can unplug them and they can run for another 24 hours off their capacitor banks. Sorry I do not have a link to offer.
[QUOTE=RGA]First of all be careful of those that claim Tubes are superior than SS. They can be but not always.
True. I've heard some poor tube amps. It's generally dangerous to make absolute claims. I even have some LP's that sound terrible so I can't say that LP's sound better than CD's ALL the time. But in my experience with many, many amps of both SS and tubes, the tubed products usually outperform their SS counterparts.
You mentioned the Sugden A21 which I've never heard. But the A21A is the finest solid state amp I've ever listened to. Interestingly, I didn't find it spectacular because it sounded like tubes. I found it so because it didn't do the things that SS does that make me cringe. I found no grain or etchiness, just smooth and lifelike music. If I were to buy an SS integrated amp, the Sugden would win, hands down.
SS has many more fans than tubes. I think they tend to fall into several categories - the ones who don't believe their own ears but only believe measurements, the ones with inefficient speakers, the ones who don't want to mess with biasing and changing tubes, the ones that haven't been exposed to tubed products, and the ones that have listened to tubed amps that exhibit all the poor characteristics that one reads about in the debates. It's true that some tube amps sound mushy, rolled off and distorted. The better ones don't unless they are trying to drive inefficient speakers. And efficient speakers tend to sound better anyway, IMHO so I'm in good shape using tubed amps.
spacedeckman
11-30-2003, 05:37 PM
OTLs are cool, but have a bit of a limiting factor when it comes to speaker selection. Not exactly a good choice for the uneducated masses. I am NOT unfamiliar with the layout.
Output transformers on SS...Outside of some of the bigger Mac gear, I've never seen it, but again it really doesn't exist in reality.
To completely clarify my statement then..."The VAST majority of tube amplifiers use output iron, and the VAST MINORITY of SS designs do not. We cool now?
Space
http://www.capacitors.com/picking_capacitors/pickcap.htm
Picking Capacitors by Walter Jung and Dr. Richard Marsh from MIT.
Read the actual measurements for DA of electrolytic capacitors, the capacitance change vs temp, frequency etc.
DA factors of several percent for electrolytics, not what you seem to mislead below:
"The ones I have seen are at the 5th decimal place. Be my guest, claim you can hear that stuff"
5 decimal places refers to film types. Do you even know the difference between an electrolytic and polypropylene, crafts??
That roughly translates to distortion some 25db down.
1) Turntables have rumble factors of some 70db down and we hear that
2) "High distortion" tube amps, which you attack, have distortions only 25 - 30db down, and we can hear the sonic change, that by your own incinuation and attacks. If you can here it, then we can hear capacitor distortions, or are we playing games. But:
3) So we cannot hear -25db down? Here is what you stated:
"Oh, the cap test, better be under DBT. The last one was null but hey, we are still waiting for all the positive ones." (craft's quote)
So DBT tests show we can't hear 25db down distortions. Wow, that sure proves how accurate DBT tests are. And what is really embarrassing is you shot down your "own" DBT results (although no reference is given). You just keep shooting yourself in the foot.
Let me get this correct. So you are saying we can hear distortion from tube amps, but not from capacitors which have as much or more distortion than tube amps. And DBT tests show we cannot hear electrolytic capacitor distortions down only -25db.
I think you have been caught again not knowing what you are talking about.
Now Skeptic and his total lack of understanding electronics.
"People who have something exotic, esoteric, or just plain different to sell that is expensive but can't demonstrate any sound electrical engineering proof of their claims of superiority through those measurements which invariably describe mathematically completely the faults in transferring or amplifiying electrical waveforms always come up with some off the wall gobbledegook hocus pocus like strand jumping, fermi velocity, DF, DA, and LaDeeDah, to explain the unexplainable or at least impress and confuse those who are untrained and don't know technobabble when they see it."
Only problem with this are the three articles listed in the string AES, Eric Barbour, and Journal of Electrical Engineers are Mainstream engineering mags or people. By the way, Dr. Richard Marsh is one too, and teaches at MIT. So who is misleading whom Skeptic??
"And they are always right and the electrical engineers and mathematicians are always wrong."
See above Skeptic. Please don't give out bad information or information you made up.
"If capacitors were a bad way to decouple a loudspeaker from the dc bias of the output stage, the world could just as easily have stuck to transformers or have gone completely over to dc coupling."
A total lack of understanding of electronics. Output stages of SS amps are DC coupled to speakers because capacitors are so bad. Tubes can't because they have neither the current nor the low output Z unless one uses an OTL or cyclotron design. Electrolytic capacitors are worse than OPTs, unless the OPT is poorly designed.
"...but your loudspeakers have electrolytic capacitors in them as well, including in the crossover to the mid range where the human ear is MOST sensitive."
In good designs, polys are used, except in very low frequency crossovers. Only cheap designs (and cheap prices) use bipolar caps.
Enough education for today to crafts and skeptic. But it isn't good to mislead people when you have no idea of what you are talking about.
Hey, Skeptic
The fancy NYAL (Futterman) Mono-100's that had the "excellent solid state power supply" I believe were the ones with TWO chassis per channel, and they were priced at $9000 per pair. A wee bit more that $500 per pair, would you say? Would you be willing to spend 15 minutes a month to bias your amps if you could save $8500?
Let's see:
$8500/(3 hrs/yr x 15 years) = $189/Hour
Naahhh...too low for you.
But I believe this is bogus: Pure Harvey-jive:
....they designed a test rig that allowed them to adjust the critical bias controls in five minutes instead of the entire day it took Futterman with his setup."
I knew Julius, and spent a little time with Julius in his lab. So let me fill you in:
1. Julius could complete a soldered joint, start-to-finish, in less time than it would take you to pick up the iron and point it in the right direction.
2. I could adjust the bias of my Futtermans in 15 minutes, and Julius was a LOT faster than I was. A LOT faster. So I doubt it ever took an entire day for him to complete any amp-building or amp-adjusting task. He simply built too many amps to be that slow. Remember, 5000 people showed up for his memorial dinner.
mtrycraft
11-30-2003, 08:03 PM
A 1964 vintage Top-of-the-line Sears console! Before you guys start laughing, Sears was just about the ONLY way you could buy Hi-fi stuff if you weren't in the major cities like NY or LA back then. @ $469 in 1964 money, this was one expensive item too. Sears gave you three years to pay it off! This puppy was in MINT condition, the wood lovingly oiled over the years, but unfortunately it had seen little service since 1979, the year of the loss of the owner. A quick check of everything showed it all works. I didn't have a tube tester (or even know where to find one) but I changed out the tubes to a set of new-in-box Sylvania tubes that were there. OK, put on some FM, and guess what..SOUND!
Sweet, euphonic, rolled off, easy to listen to all day, music! Got out the old Christmas records, changed out the "electro-voice" stylus (with diamond tip)! and we had sweet, euphonic, rolled off, easy to listen to all day, Christmas music! Anything below 100 or above ~5000 or so was out of it's range, but what it did, it did sweetly, and was very pleasant to listen too for many hrs. (the eggnog was flowing pretty freely too)! Now I'm sure that the THD was much higher than any SS gear that I've ever owned, but it sure didn't stop us from enjoying it. I've got a soft spot now in my heart for old equipment. I'm not going to toss my gear out and go get a vintage console, but I did have some fun with the old gear, and was not unimpressed with it's sound. Actually, it was quite good reproducing the female & male voice. One of the FM stations had a Beatles marathon going on, and it was good fun to imagine that we were back in 1965, transported back in sound by this vintage console. (did I say the eggnog was flowing pretty good)?
Cheers all!
Nothing wrong with enjoyin the old, nothing at all:)
mtrycraft
11-30-2003, 08:05 PM
Correct, my number as some SET goes well above this. Expensive Xformer. It certainly not the parts.
There are just as many, if not more $10K amps on the SS side.
General comment from me was that tube will always be more expensive to produce and, hence, buy since you need to include output transformers. Even you can't find anything wrong in that statement.
If the economies of scale for both SS and tubes were exactly the same, tubes would still be more expensive due to the output transformers.
Nothing controversial said or inferred.
Space
Nothing wrong with the statement. Yes, you did indicate the output transformes. That is what I commented on. Very expensive it seems that those output xformes increase the prise so much for a no nothing amp, a SET.
Nothing controversial, just a comment on th eexpense of the xforemers as it is nothing to make them and it seems all the tubes need them, so there must be a volume production someplace, no.
Norm Strong
11-30-2003, 09:32 PM
To those who think that newer is always better, I'd like to present as evidence the IC chip. This did nothing for amplification except make them cheaper to produce and sound quality to go down. The term "discrete circuitry" is not just a marketing term in my book. Manufacturers are not above "smoke & mirrors" to make a buck. Look at 7.1, is there actually any movies in 7.1? No, not to my knowledge. I'm just saying don't discard old technology without just cause.
ICs cheaper to produce? You bet. Sound quality goes down? Nope. Sound quality goes up.
DMK:
Ihave never heard the original A21 because the owners probably still own and operate them :)
The new, if it can be called new, A21a is the same design and arguably a very similar sound I should think but it is 25 watts over 10. Newer technology has allowed Sugden to use parts that can handle much more heat hence upping that class A power.
In the blind listening level matched panel of reviewers this amplifier was selected with ease over the others. In the What Hi Fi shootout it lost to a Roksan but the reviewers said that on a pure sound quality level it was easily the best of the lot but because it has no remote and is only 25 watts and runs very hot and has minimal features they could not select it.
Plus all the lousy designed inneficient speakers require a 100 watts to just to resemble a bass line. Pathetic.
People can yak on all they want about tests, about watts, about power, the merits of whether SS amps sound different blah blah blah
Here is the facts. That Sugden is relatively ugly, it's not particularly expensive as high end goes, it has little to no extravagant features, it has a balance knob which is a bit of a no-no to many audiophiles, it's finned heatsinks run sideways which is counter to the considered proper design of vertical. Very low watts. Did I mention it's pretty ugly.
Ohh and it isn't advertised at all. Sugden spends zero money advertising. Fans of the site have started that website. Dealers spend money advertising it now and again.
They don't change the amp basicall since 1968...the current A21a is identical to the model in 1989. Still sounds great, built like a truck and still sells.
Why does it sell? Because it sounds good. With their looks, and the watt figure - it HAS TO SOUND GOOD.
I wished I had found it on the used market. The A48b is very nice - it had sold for 20+ years going from a48 then to a48 mki and Mkii and to A48b. It started in the 70s and stopped in 1997. It has a valve sound but has more power than the A21a reaching out to about 65 watts, is not high current (which means it's not going to like a 2 ohm load) in fact running a 2 ohm speaker will pop my amp's fuse(thank heaven it has a fuse). Nor is it pure class A. The A25b and A28b are the other older notables.
Interestingly John Marks of Stereophile recently said in a discussion on the AA forum that the A21a is the class leader for sound for the price.
skeptic
12-01-2003, 03:26 AM
To completely clarify my statement then..."The VAST majority of tube amplifiers use output iron, and the VAST MINORITY of SS designs do not.
That is correct. The point is that the ss amp designers could have used them had they wanted to. Amplifier users had always been accustomed to seeing them on their equipment and paying for them. The designers rejected output transformers in favor of capacitors not just because they were cheaper but because they sound better. And with the arrival of completely DC coupled amplifiers in 1967, even the capacitor was a design option.
That is correct. The point is that the ss amp designers could have used them had they wanted to. Amplifier users had always been accustomed to seeing them on their equipment and paying for them. The designers rejected output transformers in favor of capacitors not just because they were cheaper but because they sound better. And with the arrival of completely DC coupled amplifiers in 1967, even the capacitor was a design option.
Some people just refuse to learn. No SS amps use capacitor outputs, and if they did, they sure would NOT use electrolytics.
And SS doesn't need output transformers. Your making no sense.
Tubes can't use capacitor outputs unless in an OTL or Cyclotron designs. The current capabilities are too low and the output Z is too high. And if one uses a cap on the output of an OTL, it is for disaster protection, not because of the sonics. And even then Polys would be the choice, not electrolytics.
And even different brand polys sound different.
Get a grip on yourself Skeptic and at least try to learn. Ignorance is not to be celebrated.
skeptic
12-01-2003, 07:14 AM
Some people just refuse to learn. No SS amps use capacitor outputs, and if they did, they sure would NOT use electrolytics.
And SS doesn't need output transformers. Your making no sense.
Ignorance is not to be celebrated.
I am not celebrating your ignorance, believe me.
How do you think solid state amplifiers keep 70.7 volts DC from getting into loudspeakers and destroying them? How many have you taken apart. How many have you built? How many have you studied. Apparantly none of them. I suggest you stop writing and start reading. Maybe eventually you will learn something. Unless a solid state amplifier has a dc coupled output stage, it needs a large dc blocking capacitor which is invariably a POLARIZED ELECTROLYTIC CAPACITOR. The sole exceptions that I know of are the early McIntosh units.
bturk667
12-01-2003, 09:48 AM
VTL makes tube amps with that much power?
How about 100 wpc?
How about 200 wpc?
I am not celebrating your ignorance, believe me.
How do you think solid state amplifiers keep 70.7 volts DC from getting into loudspeakers and destroying them? How many have you taken apart. How many have you built? How many have you studied. Apparantly none of them. I suggest you stop writing and start reading. Maybe eventually you will learn something. Unless a solid state amplifier has a dc coupled output stage, it needs a large dc blocking capacitor which is invariably a POLARIZED ELECTROLYTIC CAPACITOR. The sole exceptions that I know of are the early McIntosh units.
You have got to be kidding. Name some brands that use caps on the output. I want to read those high quality brands.
Only lowfi would have 70 volts DC on the output and use caps; like for schools, intercom systems etc. Any halfway good audiophile piece would use complimentary circuitry and DC couple out.
Are you using one of those amps, with the polarized electrolytic caps on the output for your listening??
Lowfi would obviously use caps to save money as sonic quality is not very importance. They certainly wouldn't use OPTs.
Get back to reality, man.
skeptic
12-01-2003, 12:46 PM
VTL makes tube amps with that much power?
How about 100 wpc?
How about 200 wpc?
I was once of the opinion that you couldn't have too much power. That was the mantra. That is still the conventional thinking. I no longer believe it. IMO, once you have enough power to drive your speakers as loud as they will ever have to play without clipping in the room they are installed in, that is enough. More is not merely overkill, it is bad engineering. There is usually a price to pay, a tradeoff between one virtue and another, even if it is just cost. But if excessive power availability comes at the price of increased distortion, greater noise, less reliability, then it's a trade I would not care to make. As I said, tube amplifiers can be built to hundreds or even thousands of watts. However, most manufacturers of tube amplifiers generally restrict their most powerful units to about 100 wpc or so, maybe slightly higher. This one is an exception. I think McIntosh offers some fairly large ones too.
bturk667
12-01-2003, 03:29 PM
I agree! I have an amp that will produce a 100 wpc into 8 ohms. This is more than enough power for my speakers in my room. There a few variables that one must take into account: Room size, speaker sensitivity, music one listens to, and how loud you like to listen to your music. In most cases less IS more. More power = more money! Less power = less money! I have always felt current is more important than wattage.
skeptic
12-01-2003, 03:41 PM
I have always felt current is more important than wattage.
Ahem, ahem, pardon me but....Current IS wattage. Power =current squared times R where R is the resistance of the load.
Ahem, ahem, pardon me but....Current IS wattage. Power =current squared times R where R is the resistance of the load.
I know what you meant Skeptic, but for the newbys, it is current times voltage (assuming no phase shifts) that is wattage.
One of the derivations of that formula is, as you mentioned, current squared times resistance. For those who are learning, that formula "breaks" down to current times resistance equals the voltage and then times the current again gives the wattage.
The current in the formula is RMS current, not peak or peak to peak current, for RMS wattage.
Just a technical correction.
Geoffcin
12-01-2003, 06:22 PM
Ahem, ahem, pardon me but....Current IS wattage. Power =current squared times R where R is the resistance of the load.
Exactly, but I think what he means is an amplifier capable of delivering current into a low resistance load. As you know more than most people here, speaker resistance is not uniform. Some speakers dip as low as 2 or 3 ohms. If you hook one of these up to some poor designed amp, then ask it to deliver decent current, they get all flustered, and often just shut down.
A true sign of a "high current" amp is one that doubles wattage as the resistance lowers - i.e. 200 wpc into 8 ohms, 400 into 4 ohms, 800 in two ohms, ect.
bturk667
12-01-2003, 07:52 PM
Ahem, ahem, pardon me but....Current IS wattage. Power =current squared times R where R is the resistance of the load.
Not all amps of similar wattage put out the same current. My 100 wpc amp put out more current than a 200 wpc amp that I was looking at. That's one of the reasons I chose my amp!
Exactly, but I think what he means is an amplifier capable of delivering current into a low resistance load. As you know more than most people here, speaker resistance is not uniform. Some speakers dip as low as 2 or 3 ohms. If you hook one of these up to some poor designed amp, then ask it to deliver decent current, they get all flustered, and often just shut down.
A true sign of a "high current" amp is one that doubles wattage as the resistance lowers - i.e. 200 wpc into 8 ohms, 400 into 4 ohms, 800 in two ohms, ect.
True, it is another form of distortion if the current "can't" flow as it should when lower resistance loads are encountered. The current should increase, as the load is decreased, in a linear manner until clipping. Hopefully, the clipping will be soft in manner.
topspeed
12-02-2003, 08:57 AM
Nothing like a good blood feud to warm up the new forum. How 'bout we debate Ford vs. Chevy now?
FLZapped
12-02-2003, 09:48 AM
http://www.capacitors.com/picking_capacitors/pickcap.htm
Picking Capacitors by Walter Jung and Dr. Richard Marsh from MIT.
Read the actual measurements for DA of electrolytic capacitors, the capacitance change vs temp, frequency etc.
DA factors of several percent for electrolytics, not what you seem to mislead below:
At what impedance? Did you miss the statement by the author that indicated the effect was swamped out as the circuit impedance went down? He actually mentions it twice. Now what was the circuit impedance we're talking about again? The output of an SS amp you say? Fraction of an ohm for the source and 8 ohms for the load. Hmmmm......
While this was in part a good article, it didn't shed any new light for those who were already experienced with all these things he mentioned in it.
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-02-2003, 10:35 AM
Some people just refuse to learn. No SS amps use capacitor outputs, and if they did, they sure would NOT use electrolytics.
You forgot class A power amps:
http://sound.westhost.com/project36.htm
Looks like an output coupling cap to me. (Figure 1.)
Oh and don't forget the amp design in Figure 4.
And remember Dynaco?
http://home.insightbb.com/~dunn.greg/ST120/schem2.jpg
Can ya read japanese?
http://www.intio.or.jp/jf10zl/EF.htm
Can't resist, one more:
http://www.tcaas.btinternet.co.uk/jlh1996.pdf
See page 6.
And SS doesn't need output transformers. Your making no sense.
Gee, someone should tell McIntosh.
Get a grip on yourself Skeptic and at least try to learn. Ignorance is not to be celebrated.
Ahhhh, ad hominem attacks. You're beginning to sound like Jon Risch.
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-02-2003, 10:44 AM
You have got to be kidding. Name some brands that use caps on the output. I want to read those high quality brands.
Now you're squirming....you made no mention of brand in your original assertion.
-Bruce
Now you're squirming....you made no mention of brand in your original assertion.
-Bruce
I'm not a techie by any means. But My Sugden A48b according to the review is completely DC coupled and has no capacitors of any kind in the signal path.
"One feature of the A48B is its plug-in, d.c. coupled moving-coil/moving magnet phono board.../...[s]ince i have mentioned d.c. coupled--there is not a single capacitor--of any value or description -- anywhere in the signal path." (Australian Hi-Fi).
Whatever this gobbledygook actually means it sounds good and I won't have to replace the capacitors.
FLZapped
12-03-2003, 08:26 AM
Not all amps of similar wattage put out the same current. My 100 wpc amp put out more current than a 200 wpc amp that I was looking at. That's one of the reasons I chose my amp!
:confused:
Huh? This makes no sense, both amps into the same load and same power output will have exactly the same current output.
Care to rephrase that?
-Bruce
mtrycraft
12-03-2003, 11:34 AM
Not all amps of similar wattage put out the same current. My 100 wpc amp put out more current than a 200 wpc amp that I was looking at. That's one of the reasons I chose my amp!
Well, first of all, 100 watts and 200 watts are not similar amps. One puts out 2X power, so it has to put out more current into the same load, no?
100watts into 8 ohms = 3.53A
200watts into 8 ohms= 5A
Please explain what you really mean.
You forgot class A power amps:
http://sound.westhost.com/project36.htm
Looks like an output coupling cap to me. (Figure 1.)
Oh and don't forget the amp design in Figure 4.
And remember Dynaco?
http://home.insightbb.com/~dunn.greg/ST120/schem2.jpg
Can ya read japanese?
http://www.intio.or.jp/jf10zl/EF.htm
Can't resist, one more:
http://www.tcaas.btinternet.co.uk/jlh1996.pdf
See page 6.
considered to be the best in the world.
Gee, someone should tell McIntosh.
Ahhhh, ad hominem attacks. You're beginning to sound like Jon Risch.
-Bruce
In my opinion, the Dynaco and new Zen, are a long way from being the best sounding in the world. Didn't even look at the third. And only three listed? How many hundreds of better sounding brands don't use output caps.
At what impedance? Did you miss the statement by the author that indicated the effect was swamped out as the circuit impedance went down? He actually mentions it twice. Now what was the circuit impedance we're talking about again? The output of an SS amp you say? Fraction of an ohm for the source and 8 ohms for the load. Hmmmm......
While this was in part a good article, it didn't shed any new light for those who were already experienced with all these things he mentioned in it.
-Bruce
Lower resistances only lower, to minimize the effect. However, the cap still has these effects. Simple experiment. Simply take a large bipolar and connect it in series with a DC couple amp. Now we are working with 8 or 4 ohms, so very low impedance circuit. But the sound changes substantially. Point made.
As a coupling capacitor is "swamped", the low frequency response also raises, so another problem. So we must now increase the capacitor size, adding more problems with DF or ESR.
Still not an ideal situation, to be sure.
:confused:
Huh? This makes no sense, both amps into the same load and same power output will have exactly the same current output.
Care to rephrase that?
-Bruce
Depends on the collector voltage, or Vcc. If Brand A has much higher Vcc voltage, but limited current rating, then it is designed for higher impedance loads.
The output devices may not be capable of sustained high currents like brand B.
Brand B may may have lower Vcc voltages, but is designed for lower impedance loads by using higher current output devices, or more of them.
Well, first of all, 100 watts and 200 watts are not similar amps. One puts out 2X power, so it has to put out more current into the same load, no?
100watts into 8 ohms = 3.53A
200watts into 8 ohms= 5A
Please explain what you really mean.
Only partially true. The output devices will only put out the same current until the output devices of amp A reach their limit, either current capability of the device or collector dissapation, so is limited in the low impedance that can be applied without destroying the devices. Amp B probably has higher current devices and/or higher collector dissapation ratings.
Now you're squirming....you made no mention of brand in your original assertion.
-Bruce
Ah, but I did mention PA and school systems didn't I. Nothing of high sonic quality, to be sure. Capacitors, in cheap systems, are used to keep DC off the 70.7 volt trannies, so they won't blow if an output transistor does blow. Reliability over sonics in these situations.
If you think dynaco SS amps are great sounding amps, LOL.
bturk667
12-03-2003, 02:01 PM
:confused:
Huh? This makes no sense, both amps into the same load and same power output will have exactly the same current output.
Care to rephrase that?
-Bruce
I don't think they will when it comes to peak output.
Tubes are expensive - Tee Hee
Tubes are low power - Tee Hee
Tubes dont do bass - Tee Hee
For what it is worth I bought a tube amp from a local manufacturer here in Greece (www.tsakiridis-devices.com) that is a 70 wpc amp (with EL34's - or 100 wpc with KT88's/6550's) - The powerhouse.
The price for that unit, brand new, and including the 8 EL34's (Harmonix), VAT, packaging and everything else except cabling was a princely 1,070 Euros (about $1200).
In other words about the same price as a reasonable SS 2 channel receiver (not a top of the range one).
This unit is a dual mono design with a single, separate power supply (1 KVA) and weighs in at a tidy 25 Kg for the unit itself (around 55 lbs) with another 14 Kg for the power supply.
How does it sound - well these things are in the eye of the beholder (or is that ear?) but suffice to say I have owned supposedly very good SS amps (Accuphase) and I prefer this (despite its being half the price of the cheapest Accuphase over here).
Of course if 70-100 wpc is not enough for you there are always the big brothers of mine to consider (the Electras) with 150 wpc using EL34's or 200 WPC using KT88s/6550s. (1750 euros or 2350 euros).
Of course they do the SET thing too. 300B amps with a mighty 8 wpc - but it just didnt drive my speakers so it wasnt for me.
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 07:54 AM
Well, first of all, 100 watts and 200 watts are not similar amps. One puts out 2X power, so it has to put out more current into the same load, no?
100watts into 8 ohms = 3.53A
200watts into 8 ohms= 5A
Please explain what you really mean.
He was saying his 100 watt amp put out more current than his 200 watt amp originally, so I was trying to get a clarification......besides he fact that each running at the same power output would produce the same current flow into the same load impedance.
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 08:00 AM
I don't think they will when it comes to peak output.
Okay, but then I also think if you go look at the specs and compare the two, you'll probably finds the 200 watt amp isn't rated for the same load range as the 100 watt amp, correct?
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 08:02 AM
In my opinion, the Dynaco and new Zen, are a long way from being the best sounding in the world. Didn't even look at the third. And only three listed? How many hundreds of better sounding brands don't use output caps.
Hey, you made the blanket statement that SS amps do not use output coupling caps, nothing about brands, quality, yad, yada, yada.....
Well, you were obviously wrong, now are you just going to admit it, or continue to try and squirm out of the fact you made a blanket statement?
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 08:10 AM
Lower resistances only lower, to minimize the effect. However, the cap still has these effects. Simple experiment. Simply take a large bipolar and connect it in series with a DC couple amp. Now we are working with 8 or 4 ohms, so very low impedance circuit. But the sound changes substantially. Point made.
PLease show any data that support the idea that the sound changes substantially in this configuration.
So we must now increase the capacitor size, adding more problems with DF or ESR.
Still not an ideal situation, to be sure.
Really, I guess you also missed that paralleling capacitors will help mitigate the effect, no? Granted it may not be ideal, but it isn't disasterous, either.
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 08:11 AM
If you think dynaco SS amps are great sounding amps, LOL.
Oh wow, now you're a mind reader as well...... :p
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-04-2003, 08:15 AM
Ah, but I did mention PA and school systems didn't I. Nothing of high sonic quality, to be sure. Capacitors, in cheap systems, are used to keep DC off the 70.7 volt trannies, so they won't blow if an output transistor does blow. Reliability over sonics in these situations.
If you think dynaco SS amps are great sounding amps, LOL.
Really.......
Some people just refuse to learn. No SS amps use capacitor outputs, and if they did, they sure would NOT use electrolytics.
And SS doesn't need output transformers. Your making no sense.
Tubes can't use capacitor outputs unless in an OTL or Cyclotron designs. The current capabilities are too low and the output Z is too high. And if one uses a cap on the output of an OTL, it is for disaster protection, not because of the sonics. And even then Polys would be the choice, not electrolytics.
I don't see any such mention.
-Bruce
PLease show any data that support the idea that the sound changes substantially in this configuration.
Really, I guess you also missed that paralleling capacitors will help mitigate the effect, no? Granted it may not be ideal, but it isn't disasterous, either.
-Bruce
Only mitigate the effect? Still very poor compared to the good components. Definitely not ideal and is disasteous if you are into really good audio.
By the way, me, my friends, everyone I know who have tested have come to the same conclusion. Electrolytic capacitors alter the sound alot. That is my data. If you don't like it, too bad. Prove to me that DBT tests are factual, proof.
Now you're squirming....you made no mention of brand in your original assertion.
-Bruce
if this is a PA forum or low/midfi forum. I thought this was a high end forum.
My apologies.
PLease show any data that support the idea that the sound changes substantially in this configuration.
Really, I guess you also missed that paralleling capacitors will help mitigate the effect, no? Granted it may not be ideal, but it isn't disasterous, either.
-Bruce
after much testing by lots of us, you don't use electrolytic capacitors in the signal path. Films are bad enough and electrolytics are many times worse sounding.
Are you after the best sound, or so so sound? Isn't this a high end forum, or low/mid end audio forum.
Paralleling capacitors will help with the DF problems, but not the DA problems as the impedances aren't changed.
Oh wow, now you're a mind reader as well...... :p
-Bruce
We are dealing with high end equipment on this forum aren't we? You mentioned it, not me. Remember this is a high end forum.
Really.......
"Some people just refuse to learn. No SS amps use capacitor outputs, and if they did, they sure would NOT use electrolytics.
And SS doesn't need output transformers. Your making no sense."
In high end components. This is a place to learn the best, isn't it? Or are we pushing mediocrity as good components? Some things are implied as this is a high end forum isn't it?
"Tubes can't use capacitor outputs unless in an OTL or Cyclotron designs. The current capabilities are too low and the output Z is too high. And if one uses a cap on the output of an OTL, it is for disaster protection, not because of the sonics. And even then Polys would be the choice, not electrolytics.
I don't see any such mention.
-Bruce
Again, this is a high end forum isn't it? Some things are implied. However, for the newby, amplifier output electrolytic capacitors are only used in lowfi, PA applications. Not in highend applicatons. The examples that FL mentions are lowfi circuits. The "new Zen" uses two electrolytic caps in the circuit path, a very poor application in my opinion.
FLZapped
12-05-2003, 08:03 AM
Again, this is a high end forum isn't it? Some things are implied. However, for the newby, amplifier output electrolytic capacitors are only used in lowfi, PA applications. Not in highend applicatons. The examples that FL mentions are lowfi circuits. The "new Zen" uses two electrolytic caps in the circuit path, a very poor application in my opinion.
Really? I see no words in the title that say high-end only. You're squirmin' dude, ya just can't admit you essentially opened your mouth and inserted your foot into it, can you? :rolleyes:
-Bruce
FLZapped
12-05-2003, 08:19 AM
Only mitigate the effect? Still very poor compared to the good components. Definitely not ideal and is disasteous if you are into really good audio.
By the way, me, my friends, everyone I know who have tested have come to the same conclusion. Electrolytic capacitors alter the sound alot. That is my data. If you don't like it, too bad. Prove to me that DBT tests are factual, proof.
Actually, this is getting away from your original assertion that output coupling caps are not used in SS amps. Design philosophy is another topic.
However, you just can't seem to admit that you made a blanket statement regarding their usage and are squirming and trying to divert the discussion so you won't have to own up to the fact that indeed there are designs that use them and your blanket statement was, and is, wholly incorrect.
-Bruce
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-05-2003, 09:04 AM
Again, this is a high end forum isn't it? Some things are implied.
Having participated on this forum for a number of years I'd have to disagree that this is a Hi-End Audio forum. No disrepect intended but there are many more questions about receivers and HT than serious inquiries into Hi-End gear. I suppose we need to clarify the term. As to your next statement, that is pretty scary really, and especially so on this forum. While many of the regulars are familiar with me, and I them, we may gloss over things a bit as they have been discussed many times. Though I've always found it aggravating but necessary that I do not assume my POV or statements made were understood or "anything implied". All this accomplishes is misinformation or misrepresentation. Aggravating to deal with but that's the "house rules". And as you move from one forum to another the "rules of engagement" change.
MikE
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu, my apologies to both. I see from your statement that those with HT etc. post here.
Assumptions can cause confusion, my apologies, but my intentions were the best.
But I must state that no high end SS components us electrolytic caps as output coupling caps in the best gear, or even midfi gear.
And nobody is squirming FL, LOL, how you can make a big deal out of this is beyond me. Who cares??
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-05-2003, 01:43 PM
I was just trying to be helpful. Some people will go to no end to find a falsehood in anything we post. I think if people weren't so dogmatic and willing to look further than the lenght of their noses we would have a more enjoyable and educational forum.
Rule Number One: It's not about music or audio... it's ALL about winning. Welcome to AR!
MikE
Beckman
12-05-2003, 04:34 PM
There is nothing tubes can do that solid state can't due, except:
When a Soviet pilot defected with his MiG-25 to Japan in 1976, U.S. military officials were stunned when they examined what they thought was the most advanced fighter jet in the world. The Russians, it turned out, were still using old-fashioned vacuum tubes instead of state-of-the-art transistors and computer chips. For all their vaunted military reputation, the Soviets seemed incredibly backward. Eventually though, it dawned on the Americans that the Soviets had figured out the old tubes would be less vulnerable to the electro-magnetic pulse of a nuclear blast than some newer components.
<http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jul2001/nf2001079_954.htm>
Tube audio equipment can survive the electomagnetic energy released from a large nuclear reaction.
There is nothing tubes can do that solid state can't due, except:
When a Soviet pilot defected with his MiG-25 to Japan in 1976, U.S. military officials were stunned when they examined what they thought was the most advanced fighter jet in the world. The Russians, it turned out, were still using old-fashioned vacuum tubes instead of state-of-the-art transistors and computer chips. For all their vaunted military reputation, the Soviets seemed incredibly backward. Eventually though, it dawned on the Americans that the Soviets had figured out the old tubes would be less vulnerable to the electro-magnetic pulse of a nuclear blast than some newer components.
<http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jul2001/nf2001079_954.htm>
Tube audio equipment can survive the electomagnetic energy released from a large nuclear reaction.
Having listened to alot of both the best SS and tube components, the SS components always seem to be veiled and some inner detail is missing when compared to the good tube components.
To me, tubes give a sense of realism, not only with accurate timbre, but the inner detail, that extra dimension that SS just doesn't do.
bturk667
12-05-2003, 06:46 PM
Nothing like a good blood feud to warm up the new forum. How 'bout we debate Ford vs. Chevy now?
F= found
O= on
R= road
D= dead
F= fixed
O= or
R= repaired
D= daily
topspeed
12-05-2003, 10:49 PM
F= found
O= on
R= road
D= dead
F= fixed
O= or
R= repaired
D= daily
Bturk you're killin' me dude! First you're a Sooner and now you like Chevy! Next thing you'll tell me is you're a Yankee fan and you'll win the Trifecta!
I actually have no problem with Chevy. It's GM I have no respect for. How can the largest corporation in the world with its vast supplier base and near limitless engineering resources still put out that crap like RGA's Grand Am, the Cavalier, and just about every single other appliance with four wheels? With the possible exception of their trucks and the Corvette, there isn't one car they make that can stand up to the imports. Think about it, you've got the Accord, Camry...and the Malibu??? That's a clean sheet design and they still screwed it up! Oh man I'd better stop, my blood pressure is rising...
Two words:
Ford GT
Bturk you're killin' me dude! First you're a Sooner and now you like Chevy! Next thing you'll tell me is you're a Yankee fan and you'll win the Trifecta!
I actually have no problem with Chevy. It's GM I have no respect for. How can the largest corporation in the world with its vast supplier base and near limitless engineering resources still put out that crap like RGA's Grand Am, the Cavalier, and just about every single other appliance with four wheels? With the possible exception of their trucks and the Corvette, there isn't one car they make that can stand up to the imports. Think about it, you've got the Accord, Camry...and the Malibu??? That's a clean sheet design and they still screwed it up! Oh man I'd better stop, my blood pressure is rising...
Two words:
Ford GT
Toyota is catching up...people like me figure it out after we get burned once. I will NEVER if I can at all help it, buy a vehicle from the big three. Actually they are not the big 3 Toyota has passed both Ford and Chrysler. TheLemon Aid called the Focus one of the worst cars ever made(or to this effect) in the 2004 used car guide. It was hilarious though I felt sorry for the poor shmucks anectodal stories. Atrocious car...look at all the great reviews it got by the heavily advertised magazines???
In my 1996 used car guide the ONLY GMs that got a recommendation were the Sprint and the Camaro. The Sprint is actually a Suzuki that GM puts a body on. The Camaro was noted to have lots of problems but for what it is it was reasonably cheap.
And my Dad's story with his V10 Dodge Ram...ick.
Sooner or later the big three are going to crumble to the Japanese )and the Koreans)...2 down... Pretty sad when Hyundai entry levels are better built cars than Cadillacs and Lincolns...two expensive pieces of utter garbage.
Having listened to alot of both the best SS and tube components, the SS components always seem to be veiled and some inner detail is missing when compared to the good tube components.
To me, tubes give a sense of realism, not only with accurate timbre, but the inner detail, that extra dimension that SS just doesn't do.
Agreed. Live music is the barometer I go by when choosing gear and, to some extent, recordings. Recordings are somewhat exempt because I'm at the mercy of the recording engineer and better to have the music in my home in some fashion than not at all. Tubes sound closer to live music to my ears.
Once again, I realize we are still a long way from being able to reproduce live music in the home. But my system is a lot closer than I ever imagined possible, particularly when LP's are spinning. As a tubes and vinyl fanatic, it's plain that I don't worship at the altar of measurements. I think they are important just as the first few chapters of a novel are important. But they don't tell the whole story.
. I think if people weren't so dogmatic and willing to look further than the lenght of their noses we would have a more enjoyable and educational forum. MikE
Hey, MikEy!
I agree with that statement to a point. I guess I think that A/R also needs the pragmatists to give us the other side of the story and it's helpful to me that many of them are so unerring in their support of their own POV's. I've learned a lot from such people, just as I have learned a lot from folks like yourself, RGA, and many others on the more subjective side of the slate. I've grown a lot in my thinking in the last 3 years that I've posted on A/R. I'm still a tubes/vinyl/measurements are only part of the story guy as I was when I started here but I've learn to ask more questions about why certain things behave or hit me as they do rather than blind acceptance. On the other hand, a statement such as "tubes or vinyl measure less well than their counterparts and therefore they are crap" tells me that those making such claims have no experience with what they're complaining about but are merely worshipping at the altar of measurements.
The real truth about audio lies somewhere in the middle of the two extreme POV's, objectivity and subjectivity. But rather than worry about either side too much, I simply buy what sounds most like live music to me and too bad if I don't fall solidly into either camp. If it makes "music", I'll like it. If it satisfies the measurements crowd and sounds like garbage, well... I don't have much use for it.
Keep the music playing, MikE! Right now I'm playing Glenn Branca's "Symphony #1 -Tonal Plexus" which gives an audio system one heck of a workout (not to mention my ears and brain!) :)
Beckman
12-06-2003, 08:01 AM
Inner detail, warmth, emotion, some of the words used to describe he destorion that tube amplifiers produce, yes they sound different, but I will take an expensive solid state amp over an expensive tube amp any day. I bet if you smoked a joint while listening to a clock radio you would here: inner detail, warmth, and emotion.
[QUOTE=Beckman]Inner detail, warmth, emotion, some of the words used to describe he destorion that tube amplifiers produce, QUOTE]
Yes, but "glare, grain, edginess" are some of the words used to describe the distortion that solid state amps produce. Since all amps distort, I prefer the ones that do so in a manner consonant with the music rather than dissonant.
I haven't smoked a joint in almost 25 years. The main sound I'd probably hear in that case is an ambulance! :)
[QUOTE=Beckman]Inner detail, warmth, emotion, some of the words used to describe he destorion that tube amplifiers produce, QUOTE]
Yes, but "glare, grain, edginess" are some of the words used to describe the distortion that solid state amps produce. Since all amps distort, I prefer the ones that do so in a manner consonant with the music rather than dissonant.
I haven't smoked a joint in almost 25 years. The main sound I'd probably hear in that case is an ambulance! :)
DMK. I noticed you mentioned using Live music as a barometer which is a good one...one I also go by. But have you read the Qvortrup Essay on the Audio Note site regarding "Comparison by Contrast." I think he is onto something that a speaker or system should contrast the albums you put on rather than homogenize everything. I can't post the entire essay as it would probably be copywritten but click on their site - scroll down to Audio Note philosophy and choose the essay that says "Are You on the Road to Audio Hell?"
He discusses some of the pitfalls of comparing to references when recording to other discs is perhaps more of a teller. If one disc has a tiny soundstage and one is big one has a voice center right one has it way back then you have an "accurate" speaker/componant because it is TELLING you about all of these differences. Many a product don't. http://www.audionote.co.uk/
FLZapped
12-06-2003, 01:02 PM
F= found
O= on
R= road
D= dead
F= fixed
O= or
R= repaired
D= daily
Try this one....
Found On Road Dead so Driver Returns On Foot
-Bruce
Inner detail, warmth, emotion, some of the words used to describe he destorion that tube amplifiers produce, yes they sound different, but I will take an expensive solid state amp over an expensive tube amp any day. I bet if you smoked a joint while listening to a clock radio you would here: inner detail, warmth, and emotion.
Read an article and checked out the depth of tube and SS amps. Used a soundstage mapping recording. Interesting the SS amps didn't have near the accurate depth the tube amps did, althought there was some overlapping. And how does distortion produce the sound reflections, little nuisances in a recording? Distortion obviously doesn't do it. And SS doesn't do it.
So you smoke joints when listening to music? Otherwise how would you know.
DMK. I noticed you mentioned using Live music as a barometer which is a good one...one I also go by. But have you read the Qvortrup Essay on the Audio Note site regarding "Comparison by Contrast." I think he is onto something that a speaker or system should contrast the albums you put on rather than homogenize everything. I can't post the entire essay as it would probably be copywritten but click on their site - scroll down to Audio Note philosophy and choose the essay that says "Are You on the Road to Audio Hell?"
He discusses some of the pitfalls of comparing to references when recording to other discs is perhaps more of a teller. If one disc has a tiny soundstage and one is big one has a voice center right one has it way back then you have an "accurate" speaker/componant because it is TELLING you about all of these differences. Many a product don't. http://www.audionote.co.uk/
RGA, I am sure I read something like that somewhere else too. Its been a few years ago, but someone also mentioned using different kinds of music to test for common problems.
[QUOTE=RGA]. But have you read the Qvortrup Essay on the Audio Note site regarding "Comparison by Contrast." I think he is onto something that a speaker or system should contrast the albums you put on rather than homogenize everything.
I'll give it a read in a bit. It looks interesting. It does help to know your recordings intimately but I have to admit I've never taken a disc with me of music I disliked to audition gear! :)
Beckman
12-06-2003, 04:09 PM
So you smoke joints when listening to music? Otherwise how would you know.[/QUOTE]
Last time I smoked was May 24, 2002 at about 2 pm.
I just think that if you are listening to a tube amp and expect it to sound better than solid state it will.
So you smoke joints when listening to music? Otherwise how would you know.
Last time I smoked was May 24, 2002 at about 2 pm.
I just think that if you are listening to a tube amp and expect it to sound better than solid state it will.[/QUOTE]
I would think the opposite would be true too. There are alot of both types of amps that sound nasty.
I just think that if you are listening to a tube amp and expect it to sound better than solid state it will.[/QUOTE]
Expectations can account for a lot when it comes to amplifier sonics, no question about it. But the first time I heard a tube amp, I expected it to sound worse. I WANTED it to sound worse. But it was better. After some further searching, I found a few tube amps that sounded clearly superior to anything I'd ever heard that used transistors.
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-07-2003, 08:37 AM
I just think that if you are listening to a tube amp and expect it to sound better than solid state it will..
That is an idiotic POV as related to audio replay. Are there any experienced enthusiasts on this board that have fallen prey to this? I'm sorry but how in the hell does this happen? I understand how expectations can cloud your judgment but if you have a blind date with someone you presume to be beautiful and when you met they are something less than expected wouldn't the expectations be outvoted by the processing of factual information? And while not as important or dramatic as related to our audio experience, the process's used would be the same.
How's this for expectations. I had considered making the jump from EL34 PP to 300b/2a3/45 SET for two years before doing so. There were a number of compatibility and preference issues that needed to be sorted out first as well as educating myself on SET. The biggest question? Was this for me and would it satisfy me as it had many of my on-line contacts. I needed to ask myself many questions before proceeding. Eventually, the decision was made and the manufacturer chosen, and then I had to wait three [3] months while he built it [it was a custom project]. So we're talking a lot of wait time.
The expectations were extremely high when I opened the shipping crate and looked inside, and I wasn't the least disappointed... with the build quality or aesthetics - fantastic! But what did it sound like? Honestly, I wasn’t terribly impressed by those initials impressions. Sure, I'd forgot to bias the OPTs and the image was pulled to one side and but even when corrected I wasn't "blown away". This BTW is all documented in my "listening notes" on another forum. This wasn't my first SET experience but it was the first time I'd used one in my system. And it took awhile to appreciate exactly what this amp, and SET, was all about. There was the burn in factor and the fine-tuning of tubes / supporting devices involved that played a vital role in getting the amp to sound it’s best but the biggest hurdle was me. I needed to re-learn exactly what I wanted from replay, and the amp helped me do that. I realized, even more so that I didn't live for "pyrotechnics". Instead, nuance and delicacy were what moved me, and the SET did more of this than PP. Forget SS. And I’ll admit, I do have a bias against SS but that didn’t stop me from recognizing the very musical qualities in a friend’s system what uses a highly tweaked McCormick dna-1. I will never argue the benefits of one type over another, that is your choice. And if you're happy that's what matters. If our associations are not connected by experience we have little relevant info to share.
For those of you that really think you can't be trusted to make an informed decision I feel for you. How do you make it through your day? You must have a house filled with remorseful purchases to haunt you.
MikE
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-07-2003, 09:06 AM
Always good to hear from you, hope you and your's are well. I'm not saying I've not benefited from those that share another POV. I have and I'd like to think I'm open to learning. I'm able to recognize a well presented argument, and many of the Objectivists are good at it. And I also believe that any forum benefits from having all opinions presented. That I feel is a weakness of AA. There is too much congratulating and not enough fresh viewpoints. Much of the debate entails arguing the finer points of our shared passion, not the questioning of it's validity.
I'm checking out the new Beatles remix [or unmix] "Naked" album myself. Happy Holidays!
MikE
bturk667
12-07-2003, 09:08 AM
Okay, but then I also think if you go look at the specs and compare the two, you'll probably finds the 200 watt amp isn't rated for the same load range as the 100 watt amp, correct?
-Bruce
Both were rated into 4 ohms, but the McCormack was rated into 2 ohms.
bturk667
12-07-2003, 09:14 AM
He was saying his 100 watt amp put out more current than his 200 watt amp originally, so I was trying to get a clarification......besides he fact that each running at the same power output would produce the same current flow into the same load impedance.
-Bruce
MacIntosh makes an amp that puts out them same power into 8,4, and 2 ohm loads. The difference,voltage and current output. Less voltage and more current into lower impedance loads, yet same power.
Some final thoughts since this is the last page.
1) I saw alot of different opinions, I think some more valid than others. I think most here are totally sincere in their beliefs.
2) I find it difficult to understand how so many believe that turntable rumble, tube distortions, 25-70db down, etc are obviously heard in a system, yet some major distortions from electrolytic capacitors isn't? We are only talking about distortions, which are not part of the music, of 1/10th to 1/20 down from the music, but it isn't heard according to DBT testing? Quite obviously, something is seriously wrong with the testing in my opinion. As a suggestion, when listening at a store, ask someone who you don't know what there opinion is between two components you have already listened too. See if the differences are in your head or true. Make sure he doesn't know your opinion beforehand though.
3) Frankly, both tube and SS amps have good points and poor points. I think tube amps have more substantial good points.
4) Advances in technology will obsolete current Tube and SS products, older types too, and is already doing so.
Beckman
12-07-2003, 10:22 PM
.
That is an idiotic POV as related to audio replay. Are there any experienced enthusiasts on this board that have fallen prey to this? I'm sorry but how in the hell does this happen? I understand how expectations can cloud your judgment but if you have a blind date with someone you presume to be beautiful and when you met they are something less than expected wouldn't the expectations be outvoted by the processing of factual information? And while not as important or dramatic as related to our audio experience, the process's used would be the same.
For those of you that really think you can't be trusted to make an informed decision I feel for you. How do you make it through your day? You must have a house filled with remorseful purchases to haunt you.
MikE
Idiotic point of view?
An informed decision?
Did I strike a nerve?
Should I go out and spend $2000 on a tube amp and read discussion forums on why tube amps are so great to make me feel better about my purchases?
mtrycraft
12-07-2003, 10:31 PM
Read an article and checked out the depth of tube and SS amps. Used a soundstage mapping recording. Interesting the SS amps didn't have near the accurate depth the tube amps did, althought there was some overlapping. And how does distortion produce the sound reflections, little nuisances in a recording? Distortion obviously doesn't do it. And SS doesn't do it.
So you smoke joints when listening to music? Otherwise how would you know.
Of course that article was under DBT conditions, right?
No? What do you mean? Then it is worthless, has no meaning, zero. End of story.
mtrycraft
12-07-2003, 10:42 PM
By the way, me, my friends, everyone I know who have tested have come to the same conclusion. Electrolytic capacitors alter the sound alot. That is my data. If you don't like it, too bad. Prove to me that DBT tests are factual, proof.
Hearsay anecdote. Worthless, has no meaning. Sighted listening for audible differences is junk science. Get a grip.
Proof of DBT? You cannot handle the truth. You had the citations and yet you refuse to read them.
Please keep following Walt Jung, he will lead you down the rabit hole.
mtrycraft
12-07-2003, 10:46 PM
Having listened to alot of both the best SS and tube components, the SS components always seem to be veiled and some inner detail is missing when compared to the good tube components.
To me, tubes give a sense of realism, not only with accurate timbre, but the inner detail, that extra dimension that SS just doesn't do.
But you are biased. How would you know which sounded what? No idea, zero. Sheer speculation on your part. Garbage in, garbage out.
FLZapped
12-08-2003, 05:40 AM
Both were rated into 4 ohms, but the McCormack was rated into 2 ohms.
Okay, that would explain it then.....-Bruce
FLZapped
12-08-2003, 05:52 AM
MacIntosh makes an amp that puts out them same power into 8,4, and 2 ohm loads. The difference,voltage and current output. Less voltage and more current into lower impedance loads, yet same power.
Probably a transformer output with multiple taps.
-Bruce
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-08-2003, 06:25 AM
You only repeat my statements but offer no rebuttle. Why is that? As other members of this forum have pointed out to me many times, when you make sweeping statements and do not support them don't be surprise when there criticized. You offer no factual information, you share no personal experience.
Should I go out and spend $2000 on a tube amp and read discussion forums on why tube amps are so great to make me feel better about my purchases?
How did you pencil this disjointed comment from what I wrote? Here's a recap.I said, "I will never argue the benefits of one type over another, that is your choice. And if you're happy that's what matters." You have some distain for tube amplification. Fine, enjoy listening to circuit boards, I don''t care what your preference is just don't crap on everyone else's. And educating yourself before purchase is always advized but all the knowledge in the world won't help you if you're not honest with yourself.
The crux of my argument against your blanket "if I expect it to be better it will" statement is "For those of you that really think you can't be trusted to make an informed decision I feel for you. How do you make it through your day? You must have a house filled with remorseful purchases to haunt you." The key word is TRUST.
.
MikE
Beckman
12-08-2003, 09:05 AM
Sorry for misunderstanding your last post. No hard feelings.
gonefishin
12-08-2003, 09:25 AM
Rule Number One: It's not about music or audio... it's ALL about winning. Welcome to AR!
MikE
Ain't that the truth. (now where's that puke smilie?)
perhaps discussions like this would be better described as being a how-to thread. Basic arguements 101 using audio as your topic.
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-08-2003, 10:11 AM
Ditto. MikE
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-08-2003, 10:18 AM
perhaps discussions like this would be better described as a "How to thread. Basic arguments 101 using audio as your topic". Indeed. Why do I get the feeling that Audio is just a pawn, for the players to use as props for their agendas. Thanks goodness we have AK! Off-topic, what did you buy as your Secret Santa gift? I did a search for my recipiant but can't find any leads for a possible gift. I was thinking music but no idea what he likes.
MikE
gonefishin
12-08-2003, 11:25 AM
Indeed. Why do I get the feeling that Audio is just a pawn, for the players to use as props for their agendas. Thanks goodness we have AK! Off-topic, what did you buy as your Secret Santa gift? I did a search for my recipiant but can't find any leads for a possible gift. I was thinking music but no idea what he likes.
MikE
MikE...I'm working on that now...as soon as I get the website...I'll let you know (PM)
If you want...PM me who you've got...I may (or may not) have some ideas???
oh...ok...back on topic. Beans Vs Cornbread? I think they go hand in hand :P
thepogue
12-08-2003, 03:34 PM
we're attepting to run a war-room here...
:)
Nice ta see two ole faces...
Mwalsdor_cscc_edu
12-08-2003, 07:26 PM
... after an all nighter! MikE
mtrycraft
12-08-2003, 09:37 PM
You only repeat my statements but offer no rebuttle. Why is that? As other members of this forum have pointed out to me many times, when you make sweeping statements and do not support them don't be surprise when there criticized. You offer no factual information, you share no personal experience.
How did you pencil this disjointed comment from what I wrote? Here's a recap.I said, "I will never argue the benefits of one type over another, that is your choice. And if you're happy that's what matters." You have some distain for tube amplification. Fine, enjoy listening to circuit boards, I don''t care what your preference is just don't crap on everyone else's. And educating yourself before purchase is always advized but all the knowledge in the world won't help you if you're not honest with yourself.
The crux of my argument against your blanket "if I expect it to be better it will" statement is "For those of you that really think you can't be trusted to make an informed decision I feel for you. How do you make it through your day? You must have a house filled with remorseful purchases to haunt you." The key word is TRUST.
.
MikE
Mike. It is hard enough to follow this new board, let alone this long thread on this new board. Then you post under mine intended for another? Now I have to go back and retrace who said what to whom. I need more Tylenol :)
Of course that article was under DBT conditions, right?
No? What do you mean? Then it is worthless, has no meaning, zero. End of story.
How does he know what you are thinking? ESP? LOL.
So your position is that if we hear any sonic differences, then an expensive DBT test is necessary. Otherwise it all sounds the same. LOL
Everyone remember to bring your PHd friend along to run sofisticated DBT tests every time you go to the audio store. LOL.
bturk667
12-09-2003, 04:44 PM
Probably a transformer output with multiple taps.
-Bruce
Yeah, that's probably it.
Geoffcin
12-15-2003, 04:59 PM
Can somone tell me why the tubes are so highly thought of yet the WPC are so much lower than solid states? In other words, why such a high price for only 25-35 watts with a tuber? How can such a low wattage give such a great sound. Want something (sterio) good for medium voulume classical/jazz in a fairly large room, currently have JBL Decade 26's, may upgrade them, but I just like the accurate highs. Currently have an intergrated Yamaha A-500 (100 watt I think? -bought used) Novice here of course. Thanks in advance, bobpaulo
If they still made them like this, I might want to reconsider my big SS amp.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=3065106393&category=39783
E-Stat
12-17-2003, 05:49 PM
If they still made them like this, I might want to reconsider my big SS amp.
They do. Ever hear a pair of VTL Wotans? 600 watts triode / 1200 tetrode. Simply awesome.
http://home.comcast.net/~ralphwallace/images/audio/wotan.jpg
http://home.comcast.net/~ralphwallace/images/audio/wotan_rear.jpg
bturk667
12-17-2003, 06:59 PM
They do. Ever hear a pair of VTL Wotans? 600 watts triode / 1200 tetrode. Simply awesome.
http://home.comcast.net/~ralphwallace/images/audio/wotan.jpg
http://home.comcast.net/~ralphwallace/images/audio/wotan_rear.jpg
How about those cables! Speaker, interconnects, and power chords, NICE!!!
thepogue
12-18-2003, 03:54 AM
i want some!!
Geoffcin
12-18-2003, 04:03 PM
How about those cables! Speaker, interconnects, and power chords, NICE!!!
Wotans, with Valhalla interconnects and speakers cables? I think someones been listening to too much Wagner.
Wait, didn't Wotan die when Valhalla burned at the end?
E-Stat
12-18-2003, 06:31 PM
Wotans, with Valhalla interconnects and speakers cables? I think someones been listening to too much Wagner.
Harry gets access to all the best toys. Note the MB-750s in the background (aka Brunnhildes).
Wait, didn't Wotan die when Valhalla burned at the end?
Well since Valhalla passes the flammability requirement for UL 910 tunnel tests (up to 390 degrees), the Wotans are pretty safe. A couple of weeks ago, Luke Manley brought a pair of his newest Siegfrieds to a local dealer for a meeting of the Atlanta Audio Society. While the source was nice, the Meadowlarks they used aren't quite the same as Alon Grand Exoticas. (those are the woofer towers in the background as well) :)
rw
amcfreek
07-30-2004, 05:50 PM
man being poor sucks ....
maybe showing me them toys falls under cruel and inhuman punishment of some sorts, or federal ada or something.ill have to dial 1800 shyster and ask them..
ok i like tubes .. why not , something about the dynamic range as well as what they are worth has me.. i can remember being given a lafayette la250 i used to play my guitar through .. it was too clean .. couldnt get it distort without my dad attempting to want to kill me ...
hey also nice place for tube info wich most of you ppl know http://hereford.ampr.org/cgi-bin/tube like i think best thing i have is an old freinds fisher x202.. 7868's im most shure .. i do have a couple of bogens i use for guitar when im in the mood , 1 is 2 x 6l6 , other is 4 7868 with one that was biosed wrong by an idiot and now ahs a nice red glow to it .. i have a 7868 , im thinking about swapping in 9 pin tv deflection output tubes , i think 6jn6 {sorry 12 pin } i need to go look through my box o tubes thats buried to find the sub
As a favor to a local band a few years back i lugged enough mackie / crown amps .. like racks of them , to places where the cops showed up during first set saying .. you guys have to turn it down .. some club owners will only allow them 1 speaker anny more for the pa... wonders why ...
i do have to figure out what im gonna do with a crown dc 300 {original} with crown wood case ....
outputs are out of it im too lazy to fix it right now ..
as far as tube vs solid state stuff , i have a nice pile set aside of tubes
and i can remember when ppl wanted to throw old tubes stuff away ......
sorry i didnt save like i should have ....
..
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